WackoPicko is a website that contains known vulnerabilities. It was first used for the paper Why Johnny Can't Pentest: An Analysis of Black-box Web Vulnerability Scanners
I recently created a wackopicko docker image, which is just about the easiest way to run wackopicko.
Simply run the following, which will map your local port 8080
to the
port 80
in the container. Change the 8080
to another port if you
like:
docker run -p 127.0.0.1:8080:80 -it adamdoupe/wackopicko
Once the docker image is downloaded and running, you should be able to access wackopicko on your browser: http://localhost:8080.
Note that Windows users might need some additional steps to do the port forwarding correctly. Google is your friend, use it well.
WackoPicko is now included as an application in the OWASP Broken Web Applications Project which is a Virtual Machine with numerous intentionally vulnerable application.
- WackoPicko on aldeid, a security wiki.
First, ensure that short_open_tag PHP ini option is enabled:
http://www.php.net/manual/en/ini.core.php#ini.short-open-tag
Import the WackoPicko database into MySQL using a command like the following:
mysql -u -p < current.sql
This will create the MySQL user wackopicko with the password webvuln!@# as well as create the wackopicko table.
The wackopicko table contains all of the data that was present while testing the scanners in Why Johnny Can't Pentest.
The final step is to enable read/write access to the upload directory of WackoPicko for the webserver user. An easy way to do this is:
chmod 777 -R upload
- scanner1/scanner1
- scanner2/scanner2
- bryce/bryce
- admin/admin
- adamd/adamd
- The search bar doesn't appear in Internet Explorer.
- There are some onions hanging around (particularly in the upload folder) but I kept them there to preserve parity with the version used during the tests.
- WackoPicko was developed with the assumption that is was running as the root application as the URL and won't work running as a directory.
- WackoPicko uses PHP's short tags, they must be enabled to run the application.
-
Reflected XSS
http://localhost/pictures/search.php?query=blah
The query parameter is vulnerable. -
Stored XSS
http://localhost/guestbook.php
The comment field is vulnerable. -
SessionID vulnerability
http://localhost/admin/login.php
The session cookie value is admin_session, which is an auto-incrementing value. -
Stored SQL Injection
http://localhost/users/register.php -> http://localhost/users/similar.php
The first name field of the register users form contains a stored SQL injection which is then used unsanitized on the similar users page. -
Reflected SQL Injection
http://localhost/users/login.php
The username field is vulnerable. -
Directory Traversal
http://localhost/pictures/upload.php
The tag field has a directory traversal vulnerability enabling a malicious users to overwrite any file the web server uses has access to. -
Multi-Step Stored XSS
http://localhost/pictures/view.php?picid=3
The comment field is vulnerable to XSS, however must go through a preview form. -
Forceful Browsing
http://localhost/pictures/highquality.php?picid=3&key=highquality
The user doesn't have to purchase the picture to see the high quality version. -
Command-line Injection
http://localhost/passcheck.php
The password field is vulnerable to a command line injections. -
File Inclusion
http://localhost/admin/index.php?page=login
The page is vulnerable to a file inclusion vulnerability, however you have to include %00 at the end. -
Parameter Manipulation
http://localhost/users/sample.php?userid=1
The userid parameter can be manipulated to see any user's page when you need to be logged in otherwise. -
Reflected XSS Behind JavaScript
http://localhost/piccheck.php
The name parameter is vulnerable. -
Logic Flaw
http://localhost/cart/review.php
A coupon can be applied multiple times reducing the price of an order to zero. The coupon in the initial data is SUPERYOU21. -
Reflected XSS Behind a Flash Form
http://localhost/submitname.php
The value parameter is vulnerable. -
Weak username/password
https://localhost/admin/login.php
There is a default username/password combination of admin/admin.