nicholasoh / reaver-wps

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Message Error: Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...Using Walsh #73

Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
What steps will reproduce the problem?

I use Backtrack 4 r2 and awush036nh and when i try to see the AP who has WPS 
activated, i see this error:

root@bt:~/WPS/reaver-1.3/src# walsh -i mon0

Scanning for supported APs...

[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping.. 

What version of the product are you using? On what operating system?

Reaver 1.3 download from here.

I Attach the whireshark log. Any idea of the error ?

I think is the driver of the card, because i have another card wireless ath5k 
and run ok there.

Please provide any additional information below.

Original issue reported on code.google.com by mikereav...@gmail.com on 4 Jan 2012 at 7:12

Attachments:

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Same issue 

What steps will reproduce the problem?
1. sudo ./walsh -i mon0
2. 
3. 

What is the expected output? What do you see instead?

~/bin/reaver-wps-read-only/src$ sudo ./walsh -i mon0

Scanning for supported APs...

[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
...
^C

What version of the product are you using? On what operating system?

At revision 56

Please provide any additional information below.

Machine one:
  uname -a
  Linux arch 3.1.5-1-ARCH #1 SMP PREEMPT Sat Dec 10 14:43:09 CET 2011 x86_64
  Celeron(R) Dual-Core CPU T3100 @ 1.90GHz GenuineIntel GNU/Linux

  lspci | grep Wireless
  02:00.0 Network controller: Ralink corp. RT3090 Wireless 802.11n 1T/1R PCIe

  kernel module: rt2800pci

Machine tow:
  uname -a
  Linux cell 2.6.38-13-generic #53-Ubuntu SMP Mon Nov 28 19:33:45 UTC 2011
  x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux

  lsusb | grep Wireless
  Bus 001 Device 004: ID 148f:3070 Ralink Technology, Corp. RT2870/RT3070
  Wireless Adapter

  kernel module: rt2800usb

Reaver works on both machines with BSSID 58:6d:8f:73:0f:f6
but walsh can't find APs it just display "[!] Found packet with bad FCS, 
skipping..."

Original comment by mich4th3...@googlemail.com on 4 Jan 2012 at 7:19

Attachments:

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Use the --ignore-fcs option:

$ sudo ./walsh -i mon0 --ignore-fcs

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 4 Jan 2012 at 7:20

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
oki thanks the "bad FCS" messages are gone =)

It don't displays my Cisco router BSSID 58:6d:8f:73:0f:f6
but I can run "sudo ./reaver -i mon0 -b 58:6d:8f:73:0f:f6 -vv -c 6 --pin mypin" 
with success is this normal ? 

Original comment by mich4th3...@googlemail.com on 4 Jan 2012 at 7:46

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
walsh should display your Cisco router if it is reporting that it supports WPS 
in its beacon packets. Although with the bad checksum errors data might be 
getting corrupted. Did walsh display any other APs? How long did it run (it 
takes a minute to hop through all the channels). You can also lock walsh onto 
your AP's channel using the -c option like you did with Reaver.

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 4 Jan 2012 at 7:55

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
beacon packet includes "Tag: Vendor Specific: Microsoft: WPS" option
unfortunately my router is the only one with WPS support but I will check this 
tomorrow at lunchtime with some other APs.
I run walsh about 5 minutes very close to my router but nothing 

sudo ./walsh -i mon0 -C -c 6

Scanning for supported APs...

^C

Original comment by mich4th3...@googlemail.com on 4 Jan 2012 at 8:25

Attachments:

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
In my case is perfect with the option -C

Thanks a lot.

Original comment by mikereav...@gmail.com on 4 Jan 2012 at 10:23

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
mich, here is my output when running your pcap file through walsh:

$ walsh -f walsh_test.pcap --ignore-fcs

Scanning for supported APs...

58:6D:8F:73:0F:F6 hl3

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 4 Jan 2012 at 10:57

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Livebox 2 and/or iwlagn issue again here.

Walsh 1.3 from Reaver 1.3 r58 doesn't list the Livebox 2 as supported AP. 
Beacons say WPS is enabled, as does the admin web interface.

Original comment by b1957...@nwldx.com on 5 Jan 2012 at 12:35

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
b1957, can you provide a pcap of the beacons?

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 5 Jan 2012 at 12:46

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Here's one attached.

Also, M1 (or maybe 2/3/4) contain this: 
http://img35.imageshack.us/img35/1853/pushbutton.jpg
That first made me think WPS is not accessible through Reaver's method and 
requires Push Button, but someone showed me the same screenshot from an AP he 
said was vulnerable.

Original comment by b1957...@nwldx.com on 5 Jan 2012 at 3:47

Attachments:

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
That data in the M1 message just identifies the WPS methods that can be used to 
connect clients to the AP, but that is separate from the registrar 
functionality that Reaver targets. 

I don't see anything out of the ordinary in the beacon packet, that AP should 
(obviously) be displayed by walsh. Have you tried capturing the beacons with 
another tool (wireshark, tcpdump, etc) and then running the pcap through walsh? 
If that works, then this is likely an issue with Reaver and your wireless 
driver.

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 5 Jan 2012 at 3:56

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Another way to check WPS on beacon frames is use airodump-ng and wireshark, in 
my case I use:
airodump-ng mon0 -w file  (collect beacons on all channels)
Wireshark and open file-01.pcap
And apply these filters:
wlan_mgt.tag.number==5 and wps.wifi_protected_setup_state==0x02

I obtain same results like walsh, but walsh is faster to check

Original comment by fug...@gmail.com on 5 Jan 2012 at 9:22

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
when i run "./walsh -f walsh_test.pcap --ignore-fcs" I get no output
I did "./walsh -f walsh_test.pcap | wc -l" to get the number of bad FCS messages
and I recognized that the number of bad FCS messages is equal to the number of 
packets in walsh_test.pcap.

I also run walsh in gdb and found this:

  Breakpoint 1, next_packet (header=0x7fffffffe850) at 80211.c:38
  38    {
  (gdb) n
  42        while((packet = pcap_next(get_handle(), header)) != NULL)
  (gdb) n
  44            if(get_validate_fcs())
  (gdb) p packet
  $6 = (const u_char *) 0x6498c0 ""
  (gdb) p/x *packet
  $7 = 0x0
  (gdb) n
  62    }

think there is something wrong with *packet = 0x0
I test this situtation for the first 20 breaks but I think this will repeat for 
all 155 packets in walsh_test.pcap

O and I am running walsh as root all the time just in case ^^

Original comment by mich4th3...@googlemail.com on 5 Jan 2012 at 9:40

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
@fuguet: The state may not necessarily be 0x02, although this is usually 
correct (I love the non-standard behavior of some of these APs...).

@mich: Good that you're running as root, there is a bug that actually requires 
that walsh be run as root in order to work, even when reading from a pcap file 
(file permissions issue, will be fixed on the next SVN check in). However, this 
is my output when running walsh from the latest SVN code against the 
walsh_test.pcap file:

$ sudo ./walsh -f walsh_test.pcap --ignore-fcs

Walsh v1.4 beta WiFi Protected Setup Scan Tool
Copyright (c) 2011, Tactical Network Solutions, Craig Heffner 
<cheffner@tacnetsol.com>

BSSID                          Channel       WPS Version       WPS Locked       
 ESSID
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------
58:6D:8F:73:0F:F6       6                 1.0                     N             
          hl3

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 5 Jan 2012 at 5:25

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
oki thanks for the info 
my output is ( also test 4 other APs with WPS enabled always the same )  : 

sudo ./walsh -f walsh_test.pcap -C

Walsh v1.4 beta WiFi Protected Setup Scan Tool
Copyright (c) 2011, Tactical Network Solutions, Craig Heffner 
<cheffner@tacnetsol.com>

BSSID                  Channel       WPS Version       WPS Locked        ESSID
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------

I will test this on weekend and report here if I find something out =)

Original comment by mich4th3...@googlemail.com on 5 Jan 2012 at 8:55

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Thanks 4 all;
I have it more clear, I put that state to see that the tag was as "configured". 
then better to use the filter without specifying the type of state. 

I will continue to learn and follow your advice :)

Original comment by fug...@gmail.com on 6 Jan 2012 at 3:22

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
@mitch: try doing a 'make distclean' to remove everything, then rebuild from 
scratch './configure && make'. Then see if you get any output from the 
walsh_test.pcap file.

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 6 Jan 2012 at 4:22

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
I've reproduced this issue on another machine, and it looks to be a bug with 
database permissions. If I do a 'make install' and run walsh as root, I get the 
expected output from walsh_test.pcap; else, no output. Work in progress...

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 6 Jan 2012 at 9:29

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Thanks for all ... think I can learn a lot from your source-code
keep the good work up =)

Original comment by mich4th3...@googlemail.com on 6 Jan 2012 at 10:23

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
This issue is fixed for me as of r82.

I do have to use -C otherwise I'm spammed with bad FCS, but otherwise the 
Livebox 2 appears properly in Walsh's list, with all the right info.

Good job! :)

Original comment by b1957...@nwldx.com on 9 Jan 2012 at 6:22

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Issue 111 has been merged into this issue.

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 9 Jan 2012 at 8:42

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
I was able to reproduce no-output bug in walsh. It is now working for me as of 
r83.

You MUST do an install in order for walsh to work properly:

$ svn up
$ sudo make distclean
$ ./configure && make
$ sudo make install

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 9 Jan 2012 at 8:45

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
oki thx for the fix.
Revision 83 works perfect for me 

Original comment by mich4th3...@googlemail.com on 10 Jan 2012 at 9:10

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago

Original comment by cheff...@tacnetsol.com on 10 Jan 2012 at 12:38

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
yo tengo otro problema de esa forma no lo detecta tampoco hver si me lo pueden 
aclarar ajunto una copia del primer paso sta ese..

root@bt:~# airmon-ng start wlan0

Found 5 processes that could cause trouble.
If airodump-ng, aireplay-ng or airtun-ng stops working after
a short period of time, you may want to kill (some of) them!

PID Name
1241    dhclient3
1298    dhclient3
12953   wpa_supplicant
12959   dhclient
12977   dhclient
Process with PID 1298 (dhclient3) is running on interface wlan0
Process with PID 12953 (wpa_supplicant) is running on interface wlan0
Process with PID 12977 (dhclient) is running on interface wlan0

Interface   Chipset     Driver

mon1        Atheros     ath5k - [phy0]
mon5        Atheros     ath5k - [phy0]
mon0        Atheros     ath5k - [phy0]
mon4        Atheros     ath5k - [phy0]
wlan0       Atheros     ath5k - [phy0]
                (monitor mode enabled on mon6)
mon3        Atheros     ath5k - [phy0]
mon2        Atheros     ath5k - [phy0]

root@bt:~# wash -i mon0 ignore-fcs

Wash v1.4 WiFi Protected Setup Scan Tool
Copyright (c) 2011, Tactical Network Solutions, Craig Heffner 
<cheffner@tacnetsol.com>

BSSID                  Channel       RSSI       WPS Version       WPS Locked    
    ESSID
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...
[!] Found packet with bad FCS, skipping...

Original comment by kenion...@gmail.com on 1 Mar 2013 at 7:39

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
use -C instead of ignorefcs  your  hyphenating wrong

Original comment by omdre...@gmail.com on 11 Mar 2014 at 2:27

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
wash -i mon0 --ignore-fcs
This works too

Original comment by davz...@gmail.com on 31 Jan 2015 at 9:47

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Curious to know why wash indicates that WPS isn't locked?  I'm guessing that 
this means that WPS isn't available..  Just learned about the 'wash' app via 
scanning net for something else.

00:26:18:C6:23:52       1            -77        1.0               No            
    SSID1
2C:39:96:FD:32:D4       1            -79        1.0               No            
    SSID2
40:F2:01:F2:28:37       1            -79        1.0               No            
    SSID3
2C:39:96:3E:62:2A       1            -82        1.0               No            
    SSID4
0C:47:3D:E9:62:68       4            -89        1.0               No            
    SSID5
0C:47:3D:C3:03:38       4            -91        1.0               No            
    SSID6
68:B6:FC:C6:E8:B8       6            -80        1.0               No            
    SSID7
2C:E4:12:8E:10:C5       6            -89        1.0               No            
    SSID8
34:8A:AE:FB:EA:AE      11            -90        1.0               No            
    SSID9

Original comment by afssolut...@gmail.com on 8 Feb 2015 at 9:22