Metasploitable3 is a VM that is built from the ground up with a large amount of security vulnerabilities. It is intended to be used as a target for testing exploits with metasploit.
Metasploitable3 is released under a BSD-style license. See COPYING for more details.
To use the prebuilt images provided at https://app.vagrantup.com/rapid7/ create a new local metasploitable workspace:
Linux users:
mkdir metasploitable3-workspace
cd metasploitable3-workspace
curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rapid7/metasploitable3/master/Vagrantfile && vagrant up
Windows users:
mkdir metasploitable3-workspace
cd metasploitable3-workspace
Invoke-WebRequest -Uri "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rapid7/metasploitable3/master/Vagrantfile" -OutFile "Vagrantfile"
vagrant up
Or clone this repository and build your own box.
System Requirements:
- OS capable of running all of the required applications listed below
- VT-x/AMD-V Supported Processor recommended
- 65 GB Available space on drive
- 4.5 GB RAM
Requirements:
- Packer
- Vagrant
- Vagrant Reload Plugin
- VirtualBox, libvirt/qemu-kvm, or vmware (paid license required), or parallels (paid license required)
- Internet connection
-
- On Linux/OSX run
./build.sh windows2008to build the Windows box or./build.sh ubuntu1404to build the Linux box. If /tmp is small, useTMPDIR=/var/tmp ./build.sh ...to store temporary packer disk images under /var/tmp. - On Windows, open powershell terminal and run
.\build.ps1 windows2008to build the Windows box or.\build.ps1 ubuntu1404to build the Linux box. If no option is passed to the script i.e..\build.ps1, then both the boxes are built.
- On Linux/OSX run
- If both the boxes were successfully built, run
vagrant upto start both. To start any one VM, you can use:vagrant up ub1404: to start the Linux boxvagrant up win2k8: to start the Windows box
- When this process completes, you should be able to open the VM within VirtualBox and login. The default credentials are U:
vagrantand P:vagrant.
- Clone this repo and navigate to the main directory.
- Build the base VM image by running
packer build --only=<provider> ./packer/templates/windows_2008_r2.jsonwhere<provider>is your preferred virtualization platform. Currentlyvirtualbox-iso,qemu, andvmware-isoproviders are supported. This will take a while the first time you run it since it has to download the OS installation ISO. - After the base Vagrant box is created you need to add it to your Vagrant environment. This can be done with the command
vagrant box add packer/builds/windows_2008_r2_*_0.1.0.box --name=rapid7/metasploitable3-win2k8. - Use
vagrant plugin install vagrant-reloadto install the reload vagrant provisioner if you haven't already. - To start the VM, run the command
vagrant up win2k8. This will start up the VM and run all of the installation and configuration scripts necessary to set everything up. This takes about 10 minutes. - Once this process completes, you can open up the VM within VirtualBox and login. The default credentials are:
- Username:
vagrant - Password:
vagrant
- Username:
Using Vagrant and a lightweight Ubuntu 14.04 vagrant cloud box image, you can quickly set up and customize ub1404 Metasploitable3 for development or customization. To do so, install Vagrant and a hypervisor such as VirtualBox, VMWare, or libvirt.
Install the relevant provider plugin:
# virtualbox
vagrant plugin install vagrant-vbguest
# libvirt
vagrant plugin install vagrant-libvirt
Then, navigate to the chef/dev/ub1404 directory in this repository. Examine the Vagrantfile there. Select a base box that supports your provider.
Metasploitable ub1404 uses the vagrant chef-solo provisioner. Configure the
chef_solo block in the Vagrantfile with the metasploitable chef recipes that you
desire -- you can browse them in the chef/cookbooks/metasploitable
folder. Or, add or edit your own cookbook and/or recipes there.
From the chef/dev/ub1404 directory, you can run vagrant up
to get a development virtual ub1404 instance. After the initial up build and provision,
when you edit the chef runlist or when you edit a chef recipe, run
vagrant rsync && vagrant provision from the same directory. For faster
development, you can comment-out recipes that you do not need to rerun -- but
even if they are all enabled, vagrant re-provisioning should not take longer than
one or two minutes. Chef aims to be idempotent, so you can rerun this command often.
Consider taking a snapshot (e.g., vagrant snapshot save fresh) before modifying
recipes, so that you can always return to an initial state (vagrant restore fresh).
If you want a totally fresh snapshot, you can do the initialization with
vagrant up --no-provision, then take a snapshot, followed by vagrant provision.
The wiki has a lot more detail and serves as the main source of documentation. Please check it out.
The Windows portion of this project was based off of GitHub user joefitzgerald's packer-windows project. The Packer templates, original Vagrantfile, and installation answer files were used as the base template and built upon for the needs of this project.