Slicer is a tool to automate the recon process on an APK file. Slicer accepts a path to an extracted APK file and then returns all the activities, receivers, and services which are exported and have null
permissions and can be externally provoked.
Note: The APK has to be extracted via jadx
or apktool
.
Summary
Why?
I started bug bounty like 3 weeks ago(in June 2020) and I have been trying my best on android apps. But I noticed one thing that in all the apps there were certain things which I have to do before diving in deep. So I just thought it would be nice to automate that process with a simple tool.
Why not drozer?
Well, drozer is a different beast. Even though it does finds out all the accessible components but I was tired of running those commands again and again.
Why not automate using drozer?
I actually wrote a bash script for running certain drozer commands so I won’t have to run them manually but there was still some boring stuff that had to be done. Like Checking the strings.xml
for various API keys, testing if firebase DB was publically accessible or if those google API keys have setup any cap or anything on their usage and lot of other stuff.
Why not search all the files?
I think that a tool like grep or ripgrep would be much faster to search through all the files. So if there is something specific that you want to search it would be better to use those tools. But if you think that there is something which should be checked in all the android files then feel free to open an issue.
Features
- Check if the APK has set the
android:allowbackup
totrue
- Check if the APK has set the
android:debuggable
totrue
. - Return all the activities, services and broadcast receivers which are exported and have null permission set. This is decided on the basis of two things:
android:exporte=true
is present in any of the component and have no permission set.- If exported is not mention then slicer check if any
Intent-filters
are defined for that component, if yes that means that component is exported by default(This is the rule given in android documentation.)
- Check the Firebase URL of the APK by testing it for
.json
trick.- If the firebase URL is
myapp.firebaseio.com
then it will check ifhttps://myapp.firebaseio.com/.json
returns something or gives permission denied. - If this thing is open then that can be reported as high severity.
- If the firebase URL is
- Check if the google API keys are publically accessible or not.
- This can be reported on some bounty programs but have a low severity.
- But most of the time reporting this kind of thing will bring out the pain of
Duplicate
. - Also sometimes the company can just close it as
not applicable
and will claim that the KEY has ausage cap
– r/suspiciouslyspecific 😉
- Return other API keys that are present in
strings.xml
and inAndroidManifest.xml
- List all the file names present in
/res/raw
andres/xml
directory. - Extracts all the URLs and paths.
- These can be used with tool like dirsearch or ffuf.
Installation
- Clone this repository
git clone https://github.com/mzfr/slicer cd slicer
Now you can run it: python3 slicer.py -h
Usage
It’s very simple to use. Following options are available:
Extract information from Manifest and strings of an APK Usage: slicer [OPTION] [Extracted APK directory] Options: -d, --dir path to jadx output directory -o, --output Name of the output file(not implemented)
I have not implemented the output
flag yet because I think if you can redirect slicer output to a yaml file it will a proper format.
Usage Example
- Extract information from the APK and display it on the screen.
python3 slicer.py -d path/to/extact/apk -c config.json