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Neale Pickett 2011-02-03 07:34:12 -07:00
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TF3 Categories
==============
Last year we ran:
bletchley, compaq, crypto, forensics, hackme, hispaniola, net-re,
sequence, skynet, survey, webapp, tanks, badmath, kevin
This year we have:
basemath, bletchley, codebreaking, compaq, crypto, forensics,
hackme, logger, net-re, octopus, printf, pwnables, sequence, skynet,
steg, tanks, webapp

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doc/token-categories.txt Normal file
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LANL CTF Token-Based Categories
===============================
LANL's CTF contest allows for easy addition of new modules which can use
"tokens". A token is a character string worth one point in the contest.
A point may only be claimed once per team, but multiple teams can claim
the same token and each will get a point. Tokens look like this:
example:xylep-donut-nanox
Tokens are issued by the token server using the tokencli program at the
end of this document. They can also be issued before the beginning of a
contest. If your category allows it, it will be much easier for you to
simply request a number of tokens before the contest begins, and
hard-code them into your category.
You will want to arrange that participants get a token after having
completed some sort of task. In existing categories, tokens are
frequently what lie beneath some trail of hacking. For instance, one
program provides a token when the proper printf formatting string is
provided. Another embeds five tokens into log messages using different
encodings.
Any machine that you connect to our network will get a wired connection
and should claim a static IP address on the 10.0.2.0/24 network. While
it's unlikely you'll conflict with anyone else, be prepared to
reconfigure it with a new IP on the morning of the event.
If you plan to request tokens, please do so at least 2 weeks before the
start of the event. I will need to know what you'd like your category
to be called, and how many tokens you'd like. It's not a problem if you
don't use all the tokens you request.
Remember that this is a security contest, and contestants will be far
more engaged with your category if they have to do real work to get the
tokens. For example, a vendor might be tempted to leave tokens lying
around in configuration boxes to reward people who explore its rich
configurability, but this would probably result in people clicking
through the UI as quickly as possible looking only for tokens. Far
better would be to have the tokens lying under the products
functionality somewhere, forcing contestants to interact with the
product like they would in their day to day work after having purchased
it. A Snort category, for instance, would do well to have tokens within
packet captures which triggered alarms.
I can't stress that last point enough: constestants have been known to
spend over 2 hours on a single problem. Don't be afraid to really
challenge them.
/* tokencli.c - LANL CTF token client
Author: Neale Pickett <neale@lanl.gov>
This program requires an arc4 implementation, email me if you can't find
one you like.
This also requires a shared 128-bit key. I need the key before you can
start requesting tokens from the server :)
This software has been authored by an employee or employees of Los
Alamos National Security, LLC, operator of the Los Alamos National
Laboratory (LANL) under Contract No. DE-AC52-06NA25396 with the
U.S. Department of Energy. The U.S. Government has rights to use,
reproduce, and distribute this software. The public may copy,
distribute, prepare derivative works and publicly display this software
without charge, provided that this Notice and any statement of
authorship are reproduced on all copies. Neither the Government nor
LANS makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any liability or
responsibility for the use of this software. If software is modified to
produce derivative works, such modified software should be clearly
marked, so as not to confuse it with the version available from LANL.
*/
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sysexits.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include "arc4.h"
/* I don't feel compelled to put all the TCP client code in here
* when it's so simple to run this with netcat or ucspi. Plus, using
* stdin and stdout makes it simpler to test.
*/
int
read_key(char *filename, uint8_t *key, size_t *keylen)
{
int fd = open(filename, O_RDONLY);
int len;
if (-1 == fd) {
perror("open");
return EX_NOINPUT;
}
len = read(fd, key, *keylen);
if (-1 == len) {
perror("read");
return EX_NOINPUT;
}
*keylen = (size_t)len;
return 0;
}
int
main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
uint8_t skey[200];
size_t skeylen = sizeof(skey);
char token[200];
size_t tokenlen;
int ret;
if (argc != 3) {
fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s SERVICE SERVICEKEY 3>TOKENFILE\n", argv[0]);
fprintf(stderr, "\n");
fprintf(stderr, "SERVICEKEY is a filename.\n");
fprintf(stderr, "Server chatter happens over stdin and stdout.\n");
fprintf(stderr, "Tokens are written to file descriptor 3.\n");
fprintf(stderr, "\n");
fprintf(stderr, "To run with netcat:\n");
fprintf(stderr, " nc 10.0.0.2 1 -e tokencli cat cat.key 3> tokenfile\n");
return EX_USAGE;
}
/* read in keys */
ret = read_key(argv[2], skey, &skeylen);
if (0 != ret) return ret;
/* write service name */
write(1, argv[1], strlen(argv[1]));
/* read nonce, send back encrypted version */
{
uint8_t nonce[80];
int noncelen;
noncelen = read(0, nonce, sizeof(nonce));
if (0 >= noncelen) {
perror("read");
return EX_IOERR;
}
arc4_crypt_buffer(skey, skeylen, nonce, (size_t)noncelen);
write(1, nonce, (size_t)noncelen);
}
/* read token */
{
int len;
len = read(0, token, sizeof(token));
if (0 >= len) {
perror("read");
return EX_IOERR;
}
tokenlen = (size_t)len;
}
/* decrypt it */
arc4_crypt_buffer(skey, skeylen, (uint8_t *)token, tokenlen);
/* write it to fd 3 */
write(3, token, tokenlen);
return 0;
}

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#! /bin/sh
IP=$(cat ip.txt)
ip addr del $IP dev eth0

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10.0.0.14/24

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#! /bin/sh
echo 'Try UDP.'

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#! /bin/sh -e
IP=$(cat ../octopus/ip.txt)
sv s octopus >/dev/null || exit 1
exec tcpsvd ${IP#/*} 8888 ./octopus-redirect

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#! /bin/sh
IP=$(cat ip.txt)
ip addr del $IP dev eth0

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10.0.0.8/24

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#! /bin/sh
IP=$(cat ip.txt)
ip addr del $IP dev eth0

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10.0.0.91

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#! /bin/sh
IP=$(cat ip.txt)
ip addr del $IP dev eth0

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10.0.0.3/24