Provided by: wapiti_3.0.4+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       wapiti - A web application vulnerability scanner in Python

SYNOPSIS

       wapiti -u BASE_URL [options]

DESCRIPTION

       Wapiti allows you to audit the security of your web applications.

       It  performs  "black-box" scans, i.e. it does not study the source code of the application
       but will scans the webpages of the deployed webapp, looking for scripts and forms where it
       can inject data.

       Once  it  gets this list, Wapiti acts like a fuzzer, injecting payloads to see if a script
       is vulnerable.

       Wapiti is useful only to discover vulnerabilities: it is not an exploitation  tools.  Some
       well known applications can be used for the exploitation part like the recommended sqlmap.

OPTIONS SUMMARY

       Here  is  a summary of options. It is essentially what you will get when you launch Wapiti
       without any argument. More detail on each option can be found in the following sections.

       TARGET SPECIFICATION:

       •   -u URL--scope {page,folder,domain,url,punk}

       ATTACK SPECIFICATION:

       •   -m MODULES_LIST--list-modules-l LEVEL

       PROXY AND AUTHENTICATION OPTIONS:

       •   -p PROXY_URL-a CREDENTIALS--auth-type {basic,digest,kerberos,ntlm,post}

       •   -c COOKIE_FILE

       SESSION OPTIONS:

       •   --skip-crawl--resume-crawl--flush-attacks--flush-session--store-session PATH--store-config PATH

       SCAN AND ATTACKS TUNING:

       •   -s URL-x URL-r PARAMETER--skip PARAMETER-d DEPTH--max-links-per-page MAX_LINKS_PER_PAGE--max-files-per-dir MAX_FILES_PER_DIR--max-scan-time MAX_SCAN_TIME--max-attack-time MAX_ATTACK_TIME--max-parameters MAX-S, --scan-force {paranoid,sneaky,polite,normal,aggressive,insane}

       HTTP AND NETWORK OPTIONS:

       •   -t SECONDS-H HEADER-A AGENT--verify-ssl {0,1}

       OUTPUT OPTIONS:

       •   --color-v LEVEL

       REPORT OPTIONS:

       •   -f {json,html,txt,xml}

       •   -o OUPUT_PATH

       OTHER OPTIONS:

       •   --no-bugreport--version--update-h

TARGET SPECIFICATION

-u, --url URL
           The URL that will be used as the base for the scan. Every URL found  during  the  scan
           will be checked against the base URL and the corresponding scan scope (see --scope for
           details).
           This is the only required argument. The scheme part of the URL must be either http  or
           https.

       •   --scope SCOPE
           Define the scope of the scan and attacks. Valid choices are :

       •   url : will only scan and attack the exact base URL given with -u option.

       •   page  :  will  attack  every URL matching the path of the base URL (every query string
           variation).

       •   folder : will scan and attack every URL starting with the base URL  value.  This  base
           URL should have a trailing slash (no filename).

       •   domain  : will scan and attack every URL whose domain name match the one from the base
           URL.

       •   punk : will scan and attack every URL found whatever the domain.  Think  twice  before
           using that scope.

ATTACK SPECIFICATION

-m, --module MODULE_LIST
           Set the list of attack modules (modules names separated with commas) to launch against
           the target.
           Default behavior (when the option is not set) is to use the most common modules.
           Common modules can also be specified using the "common" keyword.
           If you want to use common modules along with XXE module you can pass -m common,xxe.
           Activating all modules can be done with the "all" keyword (not recommended though).
           To launch a scan without launching any attack, just give an empty value (-m "").
           You  can  filter  on  http  methods  too  (only  get  or   post).   For   example   -m
           "xss:get,exec:post".

       •   --list-modules
           Print the list of available Wapiti modules along with a short description then exit.

       •   -l, --level LEVEL
           In previous versions Wapiti used to inject attack payloads in query strings even if no
           parameter was present in the original URL.
           While it may be successful in finding vulnerabilities that way,  it  was  causing  too
           many requests for not enough success.
           This behavior is now hidden behind this option and can be reactivated by setting -l to
           2.
           It may be useful on CGIs when developers have to parse the query-string themselves.
           Default value for this option is 1.

PROXY AND AUTHENTICATION OPTIONS

-p, --proxy PROXY_URL
           The given URL will be used as a proxy for HTTP and HTTPS requests. This URL  can  have
           one of the following scheme : http, https, socks.

       •   --tor
           Make Wapiti use a Tor listener (same as --proxy socks://127.0.0.1:9050/)

       •   -a, --auth-cred CREDENTIALS
           Set credentials to use for authentication on the target.
           Given value should be in the form login%password (% is used as a separator)

       •   --auth-type TYPE
           Set  the  authentication  mechanism to use. Valid choices are basic, digest, kerberos,
           ntlm and post (web login form).
           Kerberos and NTLM authentication may require you to install additional Python modules.
           "Post"  authentication  could  be  combined with -s to specify where to find the login
           form.

       •   -c, --cookie COOKIE_FILE
           Load cookies from  a  Wapiti  JSON  cookie  file.  See  wapiti-getcookie(1)  for  more
           information.

SESSION OPTIONS

       Since Wapiti 3.0.0, scanned URLs, discovered vulnerabilities and attacks status are stored
       in sqlite3 databases used as Wapiti session files.
       Default behavior when a previous scan session exists for the given base URL and  scope  is
       to resume the scan and attack status.
       Following options allows you to bypass this behavior/

       •   --skip-crawl
           If  a  previous  scan was performed but wasn´t finished, don´t resume the scan. Attack
           will be made on currently known URLs without scanning more.

       •   --resume-crawl
           If the crawl was previously stopped and attacks started, default behavior is  to  skip
           crawling if the session is restored.
           Use  this  option  in order to continue the scan process while keeping vulnerabilities
           and attacks in the session.

       •   --flush-attacks
           Forget everything about discovered vulnerabilities and which URL was attacked by which
           module.
           Only the scan (crawling) information will be kept.

       •   --flush-session
           Forget everything about the target for the given scope.

       •   --store-session  PATH  Specify  an alternative path for storing session (.db and .pkl)
           files.

       •   --store-config  PATH  Specify  an  alternative  path  for  storing  particular  module
           (apps.json and nikto_db) files.

SCAN AND ATTACKS TUNING

-s, --start URL
           If  for  some  reasons, Wapiti doesn´t find any (or enough) URLs from the base URL you
           can still add URLs to start the scan with.
           Those URLs will be given a depth of 0, just like the base URL.
           This option can be called several times.
           You can also give it a filename and Wapiti will read URLs from the given file (must be
           UTF-8  encoded),  one URL per line. Combined with --auth-type=post, Wapiti will try to
           find a login form on the first  URL  provided  and  to  authenticate  with  the  given
           credentials.

       •   -x, --exclude URL
           Prevent  the  given URL from being scanned. Common use is to exclude the logout URL to
           prevent the destruction of session cookies  (if  you  specified  a  cookie  file  with
           --cookie).
           This  option  can  be  applied  several  times.  Excluded URL given as a parameter can
           contain wildcards for basic pattern matching.

       •   -r, --remove PARAMETER
           If the given parameter is found in scanned URL it will be automatically removed  (URLs
           are edited).
           This option can be used several times.

       •   --skip PARAMETER
           Given parameter will be kept in URLs and forms but won´t be attacked.
           Useful if you already know non-vulnerable parameters.

       •   -d, --depth DEPTH
           When Wapiti crawls a website it gives each found URL a depth value.
           The base URL, and additional starting URLs (-s) are given a depth of 0.
           Each link found in thoses URLs got a depth of 1, and so on.
           Default maximum depth is 40 and is very large.
           This limit make sure the scan will stop at some time.
           For a fast scan a depth inferior to 5 is recommanded.

       •   --max-links-per-page MAX
           This  is  another  option  to  be  able to reduce the number of URLs discovered by the
           crawler.
           Only the first MAX links of each webpage will be extracted.
           This option is not really effective as the same link may appear on different webpages.
           It should be useful is rare conditions, for exeample when there is a  lot  a  webpages
           without query string.

       •   --max-files-per-dir MAX
           Limit the number of URLs to crawl under each folder found on the webserver.
           Note  that  an  URL with a trailing slash in the path is not necessarily a folder with
           Wapiti will treat it as its is.
           Like the previous option it should be useful only in certain situations.

       •   --max-scan-time SECONDS Stop the scan after SECONDS seconds if it  is  still  running.
           Should be useful to automatise scanning from another process (continuous testing).

       •   --max-attack-time  SECONDS Each attack module will stop after SECONDS seconds if it is
           still  running.  Should  be  useful  to  automatise  scanning  from  another   process
           (continuous testing).

       •   --max-parameters MAX
           URLs  and  forms  having  more  than  MAX  input  parameters  will be discarded before
           launching attack modules.

       •   -S, --scan-force FORCE
           The more input parameters an URL or form have, the more requests Wapiti will send.
           The sum of requests can grow rapidly and attacking a form with 40 or more input fields
           can take a huge amount of time.
           Wapiti  use  a  mathematical formula to reduce the numbers of URLs scanned for a given
           pattern (same variables names) when the number of parameters grows.
           The formula is  maximum_allowed_patterns  =  220  /  (math.exp(number_of_parameters  *
           factor) ** 2) where factor is an internal value controller by the FORCE value you give
           as an option.
           Available choices are : paranoid, sneaky, polite, normal, aggressive, insane.
           Default value is normal (147 URLs for 1 parameter, 30 for 5, 5 for 10,  1  for  14  or
           more).
           Insane mode just remove the calculation of those limits, every URL will be attacked.
           Paranoid  mode  will  attack  30  URLs with 1 parameter, 5 for 2, and just 1 for 3 and
           more).

       •   --endpoint  URL  Some  attack  modules  are  using  an  HTTP  endpoint  to  check  for
           vulnerabilities.
           For example the SSRF module inject the endpoint URL into webpage arguments to check if
           the target script try to fetch that URL.
           Default endpoint is http://wapiti3.ovh/.  Keep  in  mind  that  the  target  and  your
           computer must be able to join that endpoint for the module to work.
           On  internal  pentests this endpoint may not be accessible to the target hence you may
           prefer to set up your own endpoint.
           This option will set both internal and external endpoint URL to the same value.

       •   --internal-endpoint URL You may want to specify an internal  endpoint  different  from
           the external one.
           The internal endpoint is used by Wapiti to fetch results of attacks.
           If  you  are  behind  a  NAT  it  may  be  an  URL  for  a  local  server (for example
           http://192.168.0.1/)

       •   --external-endpoint URL Set the endpoint URL (the one that the target  will  fetch  in
           case of vulnerability).
           Using your own endpoint may reduce risk of being caught by NIDS or WAF.

HTTP AND NETWORK OPTIONS

-t, --timemout SECONDS
           Time to wait (in seconds) for a HTTP response before considering failure.

       •   -H, --header HEADER
           Set a custom HTTM header to inject in every request sent by Wapiti. This option can be
           used several times.
           Value should be a standard HTTP header line (parameter and value separated  with  a  :
           sign).

       •   -A, --user-agent AGENT
           Default  behavior of Wapiti is to use the same User-Agent as the TorBrowser, making it
           discreet when crawling standard website or .onion ones.
           But you may have to change it to bypass some restrictions so this option is here.

       •   --verify-ssl VALUE
           Wapiti doesn´t care of certificates  validation  by  default.  That  behavior  can  be
           changed by passing 1 as a value to that option.

OUTPUT OPTIONS

       Wapiti  prints  its status to standard output. The two following options allow one to tune
       the output.

       •   --color
           Outpout will be colorized based on the severity of the information (red  is  critical,
           orange for warnings, green for information).

       •   -v, --verbose LEVEL
           Set  the  level of verbosity for the output. Possible values are quiet (O), normal (1,
           default behavior) and verbose (2).

REPORT OPTIONS

       Wapiti will generate a report at the end of the attack process. Several formats of reports
       are available.

       •   -f, --format FORMAT
           Set the format of the report. Valid choices are json, html, txt and xml.
           Although  the  HTML  reports  were  rewritten  to  be  more responsive, they still are
           impracticable when there is a lot of found vulnerabilities.

       •   -o, --output OUTPUT_PATH
           Set the path were the report will be generated.

OTHER OPTIONS

--version
           Print Wapiti version then exit.

       •   --no-bugreport
           If a Wapiti attack module crashes of a non-caught exception a bug report is  generated
           and  sent  for  analysis  in  order  to improve Wapiti reliability. Note that only the
           content of the report is kept.
           You can still prevent reports from being sent using that option.

       •   --update Update particular Wapiti modules (download a fresh version of  the  apps.json
           and nikto_db files) then exit. You can combine it with --store-config to specify where
           to store downloaded files.

       •   -h, --help
           Show detailed options description. More details are available in this manpage though.

LICENSE

       Wapiti is covered by the GNU General Public License (GPL),  version  2.  Please  read  the
       LICENSE file for more information.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2006-2021 Nicolas Surribas.

AUTHORS

       Nicolas  Surribas  is  the main author, but the whole list of contributors is found in the
       separate AUTHORS file.

WEBSITE

       http://wapiti.sourceforge.io/

BUG REPORTS

       If     you     find     a     bug     in     Wapiti     please      report      it      to
       https://github.com/wapiti-scanner/wapiti/issues

SEE ALSO

       The  INSTALL.md file that comes with Wapiti contains every information required to install
       Wapiti.

                                          February 2021                                 WAPITI(1)