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nessaws: Automate Nessus scans against AWS EC2/RDS endpoints.

Project description

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Automate Nessus scans against AWS EC2/RDS endpoints.

Introduction

Want to automate scanning multiple AWS accounts with a single Nessus Professional license? This is the tool for you!

nessaws is a small Python package that automates Nessus scans against AWS EC2/RDS instances. It can also submit the penetration test request to AWS for you!

All you need to do is tag your EC2/RDS instances with a desired value and a Nessus scan name to execute. nessaws will query EC2/RDS instances with the tagged values, get the IP addresses of each instance, and submit a penetration testing request to AWS (via email). After the request has been approved, nessaws can be launched again to start the desired Nessus scans against the discovered instances.

After each scan is complete, nessaws can combine all scan results into a single Microsoft Excel (.xlsx) file. As an added bonus, each host in the scan will be checked to ensure authenticated checks have succeeded.

Installation & Configuration

To install directly from PyPi, run:

$ pip install nessaws

Alternatively, clone from source and install via setup.py:

$ python setup.py install

After installation, a configuration file must be initialized. See config.yml.sample for an example. The following options are configurable:

  • nessus_url (Optional str): The URL to your Nessus scanner (including https:// and the port). Defaults to https://localhost:8834.

  • nessus_username (Required str): The username used to authenticate to the Nessus scanner.

  • nessus_password (Required str): The password used to authenticate to the Nessus scanner.

  • nessus_secure (Optional bool): Whether to enable SSL certificate checks when communicating with the Nessus scanner. If using self-signed certificates on your Nessus scanner, this should be set to False. Defaults to True.

  • nessus_source (Required str): The IP address of the Nessus scanner as it will be seen across the AWS network, used for submitting the penetration test request. If using a Nessus scannner launched as an EC2 instance, include the instance identifier.

  • aws_accounts (Required str): A list of AWS accounts that will be scanned. Configurable options for each account are documented below:
    • aws_access_key_id (Optional str): An AWS access key that has permissions to query EC2/RDS instances. Defaults to None, which will require a valid IAM role or other boto configuration to ensure proper authentication.

    • aws_secret_access_key (Optional str): An AWS secret access key that has permissions to query EC2/RDS instances. Defaults to None, which will require a valid IAM role or other boto configuration to ensure proper authentication.

    • region (Optional str): The AWS region to authenticate to. Defaults to us-east-1.

    • root_email (Required str): The AWS account’s root email address, used for submitting the penetration test request.

    • tag_key (Optional str): The EC2/RDS tag key to query on each instance. Defaults to NessAWS.

    • account_name (Required str): The name of the AWS account, used for submitting the penetration test request and included in the final report.

    • account_number (Required int): The AWS account number, used for submitting the penetration test request.

  • always_use_private_ip (Optional bool): Whether to always use the private IP address when scanning EC2 instances. This option should be set to True if your Nessus scanner is located in a private subnet. Defaults to False.

  • smtp_host (Required str): The hostname of the SMTP server to send outgoing mail through.

  • smtp_port (Optional int): The port of the SMTP server to send outgoing mail. Defaults to 25.

  • smtp_username (Optional str): The username (if required) to authenticate to the SMTP server. Defaults to None.

  • smtp_password (Optional str): The password (if required) to authenticate to the SMTP server. Defaults to None.

  • smtp_sendas (Required str): The email address to send the penetration request email as.

  • smtp_to (Optional str): The email address to send the penetration request email to. Defaults to aws-pentest-email@aws.com.

  • smtp_tls (Optional bool): Whether or not the SMTP server should use TLS to connect. Defaults to False.

  • smtp_cc (Required str): A comma separated string of email addresses to CC on the penetration test request email.

  • smtp_subject (Optional str): The subject line of the email to send with the penetration test request. Defaults to AWS Pentest Request.

  • comments (Optional str): Additional comments to attach with the penetration test request. Defaults to None.

  • start_date (Required str): The RFC 1123 datetime that the scan will begin, used for submitting the penetration test request.

  • end_date (Required str): The RFC 1123 datetime that the scan will complete, used for submitting the penetration test request.

  • output (Optional str): Specify one output option. Currently supported options are excel, raw_csv, or none. Specifying excel will export and combine all scans into one Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. Specifying raw_csv will export the scan files to CSV in the location where nessaws is ran. Specifying none will only run the Nessus scans but perform no exporting. Defaults to excel.

EC2/RDS instances that you wish to be scanned must be tagged appropriately. Tags should configured like:

Key

Value

<tag key>

<tag value> : <nessus scan name>

The <tag key> corresponds to the tag_key specified in the configuration file above (defaults to NessAWS). The <tag value> should be set by the user, and may be a scan cadence (such as weekly, monthly, etc.) or an instance role (such as webserver, database, etc.). The tag values will be specified explicitly by the user when running the pentest-request command. The <nessus scan name> should correspond to an existing Nessus scan already configured (with proper credentials and settings). The scan targets will be updated on-the-fly as instances are discovered.

Thus, tags may look like:

Key

Value

NessAWS

weekly : test_scan

or

Key

Value

NessAWS

database : mysql_scan

Running nessaws

Penetration test request

After installing nessaws, setting up the configuration file, and tagging EC2/RDS instances appropriately, you will first need to submit a penetration test request. nessaws automates this process for you by finding EC2/RDS instances with specified tag values, filtering out any nano, micro, or small instance types, and sending an email to AWS from the root account’s email address.

The following command will submit a penetration test request for instances tagged with the value “weekly”:

$ nessaws --config config.yml pentest-request -t weekly

Multiple tags can be specified simultaneously. The following command will submit a penetration test request for instances tagged with the value “weekly” OR “daily”:

$ nessaws --config config.yml pentest-request -t weekly -t daily

If you would like to preview the penetration test request that will be sent, you can pass the –dry-run option. This will send a copy of the email to the addresses in the smtp_cc configuration detailed above.

If you wish to edit the contents of the penetration test email, see the templates/request-template.html file.

Performing Nessus scans

After the penetration test request has been approved by AWS, you can perform the Nessus scans by executing the perform-scan command. This command reads from a “state file” that is populated from the pentest-request command. Thus, no additional options are required, as the instances to scan have already been cataloged.

$ nessaws --config config.yml perform-scan

This command will also check to see that the current date on the system is within the start and end dates configured in the penetration test request. This can be bypassed if necessary:

$ nessaws --config config.yml perform-scan

The current system time is not within the submitted start time and end time. Are you sure you want to continue?

Type "yes" or "no":
yes

If excel was entered in the output configuration, a Microsoft Excel report (.xlsx) will be output at the completion of all scans. This report contains a summary sheet that includes each scan that was performed, its outcome, and the targets that were scanned. A results sheet containing the output from all scans is also included. The results are colored based on risk, and also mapped back to the EC2/RDS instance IDs or Name tags.

If you wish to run the scan again (perhaps after remediation), simply run the perform-scan command again. There is no need to submit another penetration test request as long as the date is within the requested time period.

Scanning without a Penetration Test Request

If you wish to perform a scan without submitting a penetration test request through nessaws (for example, if you prefer to do this manually or another automated process), you will need to use the –dry-run option in the pentest-request command. This command will won’t send the email to AWS, but is needed to populate a “state file” that inventories the AWS instances to scan. You don’t need a valid SMTP server, even if the email does not send, the state will be populated successfully.

Required IAM Permissions

The following IAM permissions are required for operation:

{
    "Version": "2012-10-17",
    "Statement": [
        {
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "ec2:DescribeInstances",
                "rds:DescribeDBInstances",
                "rds:ListTagsForResource"
            ],
            "Resource": "*"
        }
    ]
}

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome. If you would like to contribute, please create a pull request against master. Include unit tests if necessary, and ensure that your code passes all linters (see tox.ini).

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