A simple keystroke logger that listens and sends all keystrokes for a user on a Cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerable page to a remote dashboard page via websockets.
The XSS Keylogger project is based on a client side script which is to be embedded in a a vulnerable page that listens to keystrokes on a page, and broadcasts it to an actively running Node server.
The client side script connects using a persistent websocket connection to the Node server. The Node server then in turn relays the information received to a remote monitoring dashboard which could optionally be running.
The remote monitoring dashboard is also able to send a JavaScript snippet that is run remotely on a XSS exploited
web page that is being visited by an unsuspected user by piping it through eval()
.
This project was created for XSS educational purposes and to raise awareness on how such a vulnerability can be exploited.
Important: This solution should not be used for any malicious or illegal purposes.
Install npm
, the Node package manager, using the Homebrew package manager (or using any other means of getting
npm
installed. Once installed, run npm install
to resolve and install project related dependencies.
brew install npm
npm install
Run node index.js
to start up the Node server. The server will run on port :3000
by default. The snooping client
script will be available to access on the following URL:
http://localhost:3000/snoop.js
To demonstrate this utility locally, point your browser to the following two URLs:
-
http://localhost:3000/innocent.html
- a sample web page that has been exploited with the XSS keystroke logger client script. Any text typed on the input fields of this page will immediately be made broadcasted and made visible to a sample remote spy dashboard. -
http://localhost:3000/monitor.html
- a spy dashboard that logs all remote keystrokes from exploited clients.
From the spy dashboard, you can type and send a JavaScript snippet to run remotely in the context of the exploited client. Some tame code snippets that you can try:
// Show a popup remotely
alert("You've been Sn00ped!");
// Change background of client page to pink
document.body.style.background = 'pink';
A blog post write-up detailing how the keylogger can be embedded in a live XSS vulnerable site is coming soon.