Provided by: heartbleeder_0.1.1-9ubuntu0.23.10.1_amd64
NAME
heartbleeder - Test servers for OpenSSL CVE-2014-0160, aka Heartbleed
SYNOPSIS
heartbleeder [options] host[:443]
DESCRIPTION
heartbleeder is a tool that tests remotely (over a network) if a system is compromised by an insecure OpenSSL service, in accordance with CVE-2014-0160, aka Heartbleed. More about Heartbleed Bug can be viewed at http://heartbleed.com.
OPTIONS
-hostfile="" Path to a newline separated file with hosts or IPs. -listen="localhost:5000" Address to serve HTTP dashboard from. -pg=false Check PostgreSQL TLS. This option is incompatible with -hostfile. -refresh=10m0s Seconds to wait before rechecking secure hosts. -retry=10s Seconds to wait before retesting a host after an unfavorable response. -timeout=5s Timeout after sending heartbeat. -workers=40 Number of workers to scan hosts with, only used with hostfile flag.
NOTES
Multiple hosts may be monitored by setting '-hostfile' flag to a file with newline separated addresses. A web dashboard will be available at 'http://localhost:5000' by default. Postgres uses OpenSSL in a slightly different way. To test whether a Postgres server is vulnerable, run the following (defaults to port 5432). Example: $ heartbleeder -pg example.com.br
WARNING
No guarantees are made about the accuracy of results, and you should verify them independently by checking your OpenSSL build.
AUTHOR
heartbleeder was written by Jonathan Rudenberg <jonathan@titanous.com>. The TLS implementation was borrowed from the Go standard library. This manual page was written by Joao Eriberto Mota Filho <eriberto@eriberto.pro.br> for the Debian project (but may be used by others). The heartbleeder help page was the source.