A game-changer in cybersecurity tooling, designed to take Protobuf fuzzing and encoding in Burp Suite to new heights.
Dive in to explore its enhanced capabilities and features, setting a new benchmark in security research. This is an updated version of ProtoBurp by Dillon Franke, with enhanced features and capabilities.
We called this version ProtoBurp++ to distinguish the tool from the original project.
Description
ProtoBurp++
is a Burp Suite extension that enables security researchers to encode/decode and fuzz custom Protobuf messages.
It allows users to automatically convert JSON data into a Protobuf message based on a provided protobuf definition file.
This opens up opportunities for fuzzing inputs using Burp’s Repeater, Intruder tools and Active Scanner, as well as proxy traffic from other tools (e.g. sqlmap
).
LIMITATION 1: general protobuf support is work in progress, currently protobuf gRPC is the only fully supported!
LIMITATION 2: compression support is a work in progress.
New Features
- Dedicated Tab: Automatic decoding of proto messages in proxy/repeater.
- Automatic Serialization: Messages edited using the decode tab are automatically serialized.
- Enhanced Encoding & Decoding: Automatic encoding and decoding for requests containing the “Protoburp” header, facilitating the use of Intruder and Active Scanner.
- Protobuf Message Extractor: Extracts protobuf messages from compiled descriptors.
Old Features
- Auto-Encoding in Intruder: Automatically encodes requests containing the “Protoburp” header for use in the intruder.
- Python Support: Offers support for compiled python definitions of protobuf.
Installation
1. Clone the ProtoBurp
repository and its submodules
git clone https://github.com/dillonfranke/protoburp.git
2. Install the protoc
utility, which you’ll need to compile Protobuf defintion (.proto
) files
Mac:
brew install protobuf
Debian Linux:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install protobuf-compiler
3. Install Python3 Lib
pip3 install protobuf
Usage
1.1 Compile the .proto
file you want to convert into Python format
Several example .proto
files are contained in the test_app
folder
protoc --python_out=. addressbook.proto
1.2 Compile the .proto
file you want into descriptor
How to ensure all dependencies and .proto files are embedded in one file: protoc [...] --include_source_info --include_imports --descriptor_set_out=descriptor.pb $(PROTO_FILES)
, […] means whatever option you were using before, PROTO_FILES is the list of all the .proto files.
This way, you get a single pb file containing all the compiled .proto and their dependencies, which is really convenient for not having to change files constantly.
2. Load the ProtoBurp
extension and select your compiled .proto
file
- Click ‘Enable ProtoBurp’
- Select the Python Protobuf definition file you just compiled or the descriptor
3. Set the ProtoBurp
header on your requests, and your requests will be transformed from JSON to Protobuf!
Use this to work with Intruder and Active Scanner.
Generating A JSON Payload
You might be wondering: “How can researcher generate a JSON object from a .proto
file to use with ProtoBurp
?”
Easy, researcher wrote a script that, given a .proto
file, will fill in placeholder values to generate a JSON payload. You can then use the JSON payload with ProtoBurp
. Here’s how you use the script:
❯ python3 json-generator.py
Usage: python3 json-generator.py <compiled_proto_definition_pb2.py> <MessageName>
❯ python3 json-generator.py test_app/addressbook_pb2.py AddressBook
{
"people": [
{
"name": "example",
"id": 1,
"email": "example",
"phones": [
{
"number": "example",
"type": "PHONE_TYPE_UNSPECIFIED"
},
{
"number": "example",
"type": "PHONE_TYPE_UNSPECIFIED"
}
]
},
{
"name": "example",
"id": 1,
"email": "example",
"phones": [
{
"number": "example",
"type": "PHONE_TYPE_UNSPECIFIED"
},
{
"number": "example",
"type": "PHONE_TYPE_UNSPECIFIED"
}
]
}
]
}