Hawkeye is a project security, vulnerability and general risk highlighting tool. It has a few goals:
- Designed to be entirely extensible by just adding new modules with the correct signature to lib/modules
- Modules return results via a common interface, which permits consolidated reporting and artefact generation
- Should be easy to run, be it via NPM, or Docker, on your Host, or in a CI Server
Note: Version 0.8.0 included a breaking change to the standard output. I've switched to a more easily parsable console writer, which outputs to stderr.
Modules
As I mentioned above, modules are simply isolated bits of code that could run against the target that is being scanned. The following modules are currently implemented:
- File Names (files): Scan the file list recursively, looking for patterns as defined in data.js. We're looking for things like
id_rsa
, things that end in pem
, etc. - File Content Patterns (contents): Looks for patterns as defined in data.js within the contents of files, things like 'password: ', and 'BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY' will pop up here.
- File Content Entropy (entropy): Scan files for strings with high (Shannon) entropy, which could indicate passwords or secrets stored in the files, for example: 'kwaKM@£rFKAM3(a2klma2d'
- Node Security Project (nsp): Scan the package.json (if present) and check for vulnerabilities on Node Security Project
- NPM Check Updates (ncu): Wraps the NPM Check Updates module, to highlight outdated dependencies with increasing severity.
Note: Entropy is disabled by default because it can return a lot of results, which are mostly misses, to run it please use the -m entropy
switch, personally I use this manually checking over code bases I have inherited.
Note: We only look inside the contents of files up to 20kb, I plan to add configuration options in the future to allow you to change this.
I really, really do welcome people writing new modules so please check out lib/modules/example-shell/index.js as an example of how simple it is.
Running Hawkeye
I wanted Hawkeye to be as flexible as possible, as a result it supports numerous methods of execution.
Standalone (command line)
There are two ways to run Hawkeye from the command line, the first is the easiest if you have nodejs on your host, simply type npm install -g hawkeye-scanner
which will add the hawkeye
binary to your path.
If you don't have nodejs on your machine, or simply don't want anything on your host, you can use docker with docker run --rm -v $PWD:/target stono/hawkeye
.
Note: If you opt for docker and you are on macosx, please be aware that the osxfs
is approx 20x slower than native filesystem access, so if you're scanning a particularly large project you may experience some slow down and the npm
choice would be a better option.
As part of your docker-compose file
This is where Hawkeye is lovely, lets say you have project which has a Dockerfile
, with lines like this in:
COPY . /app
VOLUME /app
You could add hawkeye to your compose file like this:
services:
app:
build: .
hawkeye:
image: stono/hawkeye
command: scan -t /app
volumes_from:
- app
You can simply do docker-compose run --rm --no-deps hawkeye
. Woo hoo.
As part of your GoCD pipeline
If you're using ci-in-a-box or something similar, you can add a pipeline step to run these scans automatically. This is an example of running against the latest built image.
<pipeline name="security-scan">
<stage name="Hawkeye" cleanWorkingDir="true">
<jobs>
<job name="scan">
<tasks>
<exec command="docker">
<arg>pull</arg>
<arg>stono/hawkeye</arg>
<runif status="passed" />
</exec>
<exec command="bash">
<arg>-c</arg>
<arg>docker pull eu.gcr.io/your-project-name/your-image-name:latest</arg>
<runif status="passed" />
</exec>
<exec command="bash">
<arg>-c</arg>
<arg>docker run --entrypoint=/bin/true --name=your-image-name_latest eu.gcr.io/your-project-name/your-image-name:latest</arg>
<runif status="passed" />
</exec>
<exec command="bash">
<arg>-c</arg>
<arg>docker run --rm --volumes-from your-image-name_latest stono/hawkeye scan --target /app</arg>
<runif status="passed" />
</exec>
<exec command="bash">
<arg>-c</arg>
<arg>docker rm -f your-image-name_latest</arg>
<runif status="any" />
</exec>
</tasks>
</job>
</jobs>
</stage>
</pipeline>
The CLI
hawkeye scan
There are a few options available:
-a, --all: Running against all files rather than git tree
Hawkeye by default will attempt to detect a .git folder in your target, if it is there it will only scan git tracked files. Further to that, if a .git-crypt folder is detected, we will also exclude files which are GPG encrypted. If there is no .git in the target directory, then all files will be scanned.
You can override this behaviour with the --all
flag, which will scan all files regardless.
-f, --fail-on <low, medium, high, critical>: When to exit with a non-zero status code
From a pipeline perspective, the --fail-on
command is useful, you might now wish for low
items to break your build, so you could use --fail-on medium
.
-t, --target </path/to/project>: Specfiy what to scan
By default Hawkeye will look in your current working directory. You can override this behaviour though by specifying a --target
-m, --module : Running only specific modules
If you want to run specific modules only, you can use the --module
flag, which can be specified multiple times. For example hawkeye scan -m nsp -m ncu
would run just the nsp and ncu modules.
-j, --json </path/to/summary.json>: Produce a JSON artefact
The --json
paramter allows you to write a much more detailed report to a file. See the Json section below for more information
This will post the results to a SumoLogic HTTP collector. See the SumoLogic section below for more information.
-e, --exclude : Exclude files that match a specified RegEx pattern
This paramter (which can be specified multiple times) allows you to specify patterns you wish to be excluded from the scan. For example hawkeye scan -e "^test/"
would exclude all your test files. All paths are relative to the --target
.
There are some global exclusions in place, and those are "^.git/" and "^node_modules".
hawkeye modules
You can view the module status with hawkeye modules
. As previously mentioned you can see that entropy is disabled by default. If you want to run it, use the -m entropy
flag.
$ hawkeye modules
[info] Welcome to Hawkeye v0.8.0!
[info] File Contents dynamically loaded
[info] Entropy dynamically loaded
[info] Example Module dynamically loaded
[info] Secret Files dynamically loaded
[info] Node Check Updates dynamically loaded
[info] Node Security Project dynamically loaded
Module Status
[info] Enabled: File Contents (contents)
Scans files for dangerous content
[info] Disabled: Entropy (entropy)
Scans files for strings with high entropy
[info] Disabled: Example Module (example)
Example of how to write a module and shell out a command
[info] Enabled: Secret Files (files)
Scans for known secret files
[info] Enabled: Node Check Updates (ncu)
Scans a package.json for out of date packages
[info] Enabled: Node Security Project (nsp)
Scans a package.json for known vulnerabilities from NSP
Outputs
At the moment, Hawkeye supports two output writers.
Summary
The default summary output to your console looks something like this. The log information is written to stdout
and the errors found to stderr
in a console parsable tablular output
$ hawkeye scan
[info] Welcome to Hawkeye v0.8.0!
[info] File Contents dynamically loaded
[info] Entropy dynamically loaded
[info] Example Module dynamically loaded
[info] Secret Files dynamically loaded
[info] Node Check Updates dynamically loaded
[info] Node Security Project dynamically loaded
[info] git repo detected, will only use git tracked files
[info] git-crypt detected, excluding files covered by GPG encryption
[info] -> git-crypt status -e
[info] Files excluded by git-crypt: 0
[info] -> git ls-tree --full-tree --name-only -r HEAD
[info] Files included in scan: 62
[info] Target for scan: /Users/kstoney/git/stono/hawkeye
[info] Fail at level: low
[info] Running module File Contents
[info] Running module Secret Files
[info] Running module Node Check Updates
[info] -> /Users/kstoney/git/stono/hawkeye/node_modules/npm-check-updates/bin/ncu -j
[info] Running module Node Security Project
[info] -> /Users/kstoney/git/stono/hawkeye/node_modules/nsp/bin/nsp check -o json
[info] scan complete, 16 issues found
level description offender extra
-------- ------------------------------------------------ -------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
critical https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/39 uglify-js vulnerable-app@0.0.0 > jade@1.11.0 > transformers@2.1.0 > uglify-js@2.2.5
critical Private SSH key regex_rsa
critical Private SSH key id_rsa
critical Potential cryptographic private key cert.pem
critical Private key in file some_file_with_private_key_in.md Line number: 1
high https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/106 negotiator vulnerable-app@0.0.0 > express@4.13.4 > accepts@1.2.13 > negotiator@0.5.3
high Module is one or more major versions out of date nodemailer Installed: 2.6.4, Available: 3.1.8
high GNOME Keyring database file keyring
medium https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/48 uglify-js vulnerable-app@0.0.0 > jade@1.11.0 > transformers@2.1.0 > uglify-js@2.2.5
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date express Installed: 4.13.4, Available: 4.15.2
medium Rubygems credentials file gem/credentials Might contain API key for a rubygems.org account.
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date morgan Installed: 1.7.0, Available: 1.8.1
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date serve-favicon Installed: 2.3.0, Available: 2.4.1
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date body-parser Installed: 1.15.1, Available: 1.17.1
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date debug Installed: 2.2.0, Available: 2.6.3
low Contains words: private, key some_file_with_private_key_in.md
I plan to add options to supress log outputs etc in the future, but for now if you want to parse this output, you can supress the logs and just output the table like this:
$ (hawkeye scan >/dev/null) 2>&1 | tail -n +3
critical https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/39 uglify-js vulnerable-app@0.0.0 > jade@1.11.0 > transformers@2.1.0 > uglify-js@2.2.5
critical Private SSH key regex_rsa
critical Private SSH key id_rsa
critical Potential cryptographic private key cert.pem
critical Private key in file some_file_with_private_key_in.md Line number: 1
high https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/106 negotiator vulnerable-app@0.0.0 > express@4.13.4 > accepts@1.2.13 > negotiator@0.5.3
high Module is one or more major versions out of date nodemailer Installed: 2.6.4, Available: 3.1.8
high GNOME Keyring database file keyring
medium https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/48 uglify-js vulnerable-app@0.0.0 > jade@1.11.0 > transformers@2.1.0 > uglify-js@2.2.5
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date express Installed: 4.13.4, Available: 4.15.2
medium Rubygems credentials file gem/credentials Might contain API key for a rubygems.org account.
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date morgan Installed: 1.7.0, Available: 1.8.1
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date serve-favicon Installed: 2.3.0, Available: 2.4.1
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date body-parser Installed: 1.15.1, Available: 1.17.1
medium Module is one or more minor versions out of date debug Installed: 2.2.0, Available: 2.6.3
low Contains words: private, key
Here are some other handy examples:
(hawkeye scan >/dev/null) 2>&1 | tail -n +3 | grep critical
- output just critical items
Another option is for you to use a different output writer, for example...
Json
You can output much more information in the form of a JSON artefact that groups by executed module.
Check out a sample here
SumoLogic
The output of Hawkeye can be sent to a SumoLogic HTTP collector of your choice. In this example, I have a collector of hawkeye
, with a single HTTP source.
hawkeye scan --sumo https://collectors.us2.sumologic.com/receiver/v1/http/your-http-collector-url
...
[info] Doing writer: sumologic
[info] sending 16 results to SumoLogic
And in sumo logic, search for _collector="hawkeye" | json auto
:
Development
Adding a new handler
The idea is that this project should be super extensible, I want people to write new handlers with ease. Simply create a handler in lib/modules
which exposes the following signature:
- key: A short alphanumeric key for your module
- name: The name of your module
- description: The description of your module
- enabled: True or Fale as to if this module should run by default, or if it needs to be specified with
--module
- function handles(path): A function to decide if this handler should run against the target path
- function run(results, done): The function which is called if handles returns true
The run function
The first argument passed is results
, this is where the module should send its results to, it exposes four methods for each 'level' of issue found, critical
, high
, medium
and low
. Those methods expect you to pass something like this:
results.critial('offender', 'description', 'extra', { additional: 'data' });