rsbkb
has multiple tools which are designed to be called directly (through
symlinks). This allows various operations on data to be chained easily like
CyberChef but through pipes.
It also includes various practical tools like entropy
or a timestamp decoder.
- install with
cargo install rsbkb
- run
rsbkb
to list applets - run
rsbkb help <applet>
to learn more - optionally create symlinks to call applets directly (e.g.:
ln -s rsbkb slice
)
Read 10 bytes from /etc/passwd
starting at offset 0x2f
, then xor
with
0xF2
, encode it in URL-safe base64 and finally URL encode it:
$ slice /etc/passwd 0x2f +10 | xor -x f2 | b64 -u | urlenc
l5%2DdnMjdh4GA3Q%3D%3D
Various examples:
$ unhex 4141:4141
AA:AA
$ echo -n'4141:4141' | unhex
AA:AA
$ crc32 '41 41 41 32'
e60ce752
$ echo -n '41 41 41 32' | crc32
e60ce752
$ echo test | b64 | urlenc
dGVzdAo%3D
$ tsdec 146424672000234122
2065-01-01T00:00:00.0234122Z
$ tsdec 0
1970-01-01T00:00:00Z
$ rsbkb bofpatt 60
Aa0Aa1Aa2Aa3Aa4Aa5Aa6Aa7Aa8Aa9Ab0Ab1Ab2Ab3Ab4Ab5Ab6Ab7Ab8Ab9
$ rsbkb bofpattoff -b 0x41623841
Decoded pattern: Ab8A (big endian: true)
Offset: 54 (mod 20280) / 0x36
$ echo -n tototutu | rsbkb entropy
0.188
$ bgrep -x 454c460201 /bin/ls
0x1
$ bgrep "\x45\x4c..\x01" /bin/ls
0x1
$ findso -p /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ -r memcpy /bin/ls
/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
$ findso -l /etc/ld.so.conf -a memcpy
/lib/i386-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
/usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/libc.so.6
/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libasan.so.6
[...]
$ cargo rustc --release
or:
- get the binary from the release page.
- get the latest artifact from the Actions page.
- All tools take values as an argument on the command line or if not present, read stdin
- Tool name can be specified on the command line
rsbkb TOOL
- Or can be called busybox-style:
ln -s rsbkb unhex ; unhex 4142
for i in $(rsbkb list) ; do ln -s rsbkb $i ; done
hex
: hex encodeunhex
: decode hex data (either in the middle of arbitrary data, or strictly)b64
: base64 encode (use-u
or--URL
for URL-safe b64)d64
: base64 decode (use-u
or--URL
for URL-safe b64)urlenc
: url encodeurldec
: url decodexor
: xor (use-x
to specify the key, in hex,-f
to specify a file)crc
: all CRC algorithms implemented in the Crc cratecrc16
: CRC-16crc32
: CRC-32bofpatt
/boffpattoff
: buffer overflow pattern generator / offset calculatortsdec
: decode various timestamps (Epoch with different resolutions, Windows FILETIME)slice
: slice of a file: :slice input_file 10
will printinput_file
from offset 10 on stdout.slice input_file 0x10 0x20
will do the same from 0x10 to 0x20 (excluded).slice input_file 0x10 +0xFF
will copy0xFF
bytes starting at0x10
.slice input_file -0x10
will the last 0x10 bytes frominput_file
entropy
: entropy of a filebgrep
: simple binary grepfindso
: find which ELF shared library (.so) exports a given name/functioninflate
anddeflate
: raw inflate/deflate compression, fault tolerant and with optional Zlib header supportbase
: easy radix conversion of big integersescape
: backslash-escape special characters in strings (generic, single quote, shell, bash, bash single)unescape
: unescape\
escaped chars in strings
$ rsbkb help
rsbkb 1.7.0 (Rust BlackBag) - by Raphaël Rigo <[email protected]>
Usage: rsbkb [APPLET]
APPLETS:
list list applets
hex hex encode
unhex hex decode
urlenc URL encode
urldec URL decode
crc16 compute CRC-16
crc32 compute CRC-32
crc flexible CRC computation
b64 base64 encode
d64 base64 decode
bofpattoff buffer overflow pattern offset finder
bofpatt buffer overflow pattern generator
xor xor value
entropy compute file entropy
slice cut slices from file or stdin
bgrep binary grep
findso find which .so implements a given function
tsdec timestamp decoder
deflate (raw) deflate compression
inflate (raw) inflate decompression
base convert integer between different bases
escape backslash-escape input strings
unescape (backslash) unescape input strings
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
$ rsbkb help slice
cut slices from file or stdin
Usage: rsbkb slice <file> <start> [end]
Arguments:
<file> file to slice, - for stdin
<start> start of slice, relative to end of file if negative
[end] end of slice: absolute, relative to <start> if prefixed with +, relative to end of file if negative
This is a Rust reimplementation of some tools found in emonti's rbkb, itself a Ruby reimplementation of Matasano's BlackBag.