Using Docker to run Cyber Security Tools is becoming more and more popular. Here are some useful Cyber Security related dockers I found online. 

  • HFish – Honeypot
  • OWASP Amass
  • Kali
  • Docker Bench for Security
  • Docker Content Trust
  • KMS

HFish – Honeypot

docker run -d –name hfish -e USERNAME=admin -e PASSWORD=P@ssword1234 –restart=always -p 21:21 -p 22:22 -p 23:23 -p 3306:3306 -p 6379:6379 -p 8080:8080 -p 8989:8989 -p 9000:9000 -p 9001:9001 -p 11211:11211 imdevops/hfish:latest
Please make sure there is no port conflict with your existing service. If there is a conflict on port, your docker will not be able to start. You will have to remove this docker first using following command;
[root@docker1 opc]# docker rm /hfish
/hfish
Default user name and password for http://<ip>:9001:admin
It can be changed by passing following two environment variabls: -e USERNAME= -e PASSWORD= 
If need to keep data on host, you can mount host folder to container by using -v $PWD:/opt .

Notes: You might get an error when you copy/paste the command in to your VM to run this rocker. That usually causes by conflicted port which you try to open. Mostly it is caused by port 22. In that case, you can either change your VM’s port 22 to something else, or you can change your docker command to map 22 to something different, such as 2222. Here is the command:

docker run -d –name hfish -e USERNAME=admin -e PASSWORD=P@ssword1234 –restart=always -p 21:21 -p 2222:22 -p 23:23 -p 3306:3306 -p 6379:6379 -p 8080:8080 -p 8989:8989 -p 9000:9000 -p 9001:9001 -p 11211:11211 imdevops/hfish:latest

OWASP Amass

https://github.com/OWASP/Amass
The OWASP Amass is a tool to help information security professionals perform network mapping of attack surfaces and perform external asset discovery using open source information gathering and active reconnaissance techniques.

  1. Install Docker
  2. Pull the Docker image by running docker pull caffix/amass
  3. Run docker run -v OUTPUT_DIR_PATH:/.config/amass/ caffix/amass --version
v3.5.5
The volume argument allows the Amass graph database to persist between executions and output files to be accessed on the host system. The first field (left of the colon) of the volume option is the amass output directory that is external to Docker, while the second field is the path, internal to Docker, where amass will write the output files.
The wordlists maintained in the Amass git repository are available in /examples/wordlists/ within the docker container. For example, to use all.txt:
docker run -v OUTPUT_DIR_PATH:/.config/amass/ caffix/amass enum -brute -w /wordlists/all.txt -d itpro.com
$ docker run -v OUTPUT_DIR_PATH:/.config/amass/ caffix/amass enum -brute -w /wordlists/all.txt -d itpro.com
Querying CommonCrawl for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Baidu for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying CertSpotter for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Yahoo for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Sublist3rAPI for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Exalead for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Riddler for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Robtex for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying SiteDossier for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying ThreatCrowd for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Ask for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying ViewDNS for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying VirusTotal for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Dogpile for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Crtsh for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Google for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Mnemonic for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Spyse for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying IPv4Info for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Censys for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Netcraft for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying DNSDumpster for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying BufferOver for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying DNSTable for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying PTRArchive for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying AlienVault for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Pastebin for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Bing for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying GoogleCT for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying HackerTarget for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying HackerOne for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying URLScan for itprosec.com subdomains
Querying Entrust for itprosec.com subdomains
itpro.com
www.itpro.com
webmail.itpro.com
Average DNS queries performed: 3034/sec, Average retries required: 7.51%
Average DNS queries performed: 4331/sec, Average retries required: 6.14%
Average DNS queries performed: 4148/sec, Average retries required: 7.43%
Average DNS queries performed: 3828/sec, Average retries required: 7.89%
phpmyadmin.itpro.com
cpanel.itpro.com
autoconfig.itpro.com
Average DNS queries performed: 2183/sec, Average retries required: 11.36%

OWASP Amass v3.5.5                                https://github.com/OWASP/Amass
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6 names discovered - dns: 1, cert: 1, brute: 4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASN: 13335 - CLOUDFLARENET - Cloudflare, Inc.
        104.18.48.0/20          4    Subdomain Name(s)
ASN: 47583 - AS-HOSTINGER
        31.220.23.0/24          12   Subdomain Name(s)
[node1] (local) [email protected] ~

Kali

$ docker pull kalilinux/kali-rolling  
Using default tag: latest
latest: Pulling from kalilinux/kali-rolling
5b53b44b6629: Pull complete 
Digest: sha256:b95728038fcbb823a3f32b4dede9f531f56f9e9724d0215d1a34799814efb3c3
Status: Downloaded newer image for kalilinux/kali-rolling:latest
docker.io/kalilinux/kali-rolling:latest
[node1] (local) [email protected] ~
$ docker run -t -i kalilinux/kali-rolling /bin/bash
root@7da192e8bc56:/# 

Docker Bench for Security

The Docker Bench for Security is a script that checks for dozens of common best-practices around deploying Docker containers in production. Once the script is run, you will notice a lot of information regarding configuration best practices for deploying Docker containers that can be used to further secure your Docker server and containers.

[node1] (local) [email protected] ~
$ docker run -it --net host --pid host --userns host --cap-add audit_control \
>     -e DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST=$DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST \
>     -v /etc:/etc \
>     -v /var/lib:/var/lib:ro \
>     -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro \
>     --label docker_bench_security \
>     docker/docker-bench-security
Unable to find image 'docker/docker-bench-security:latest' locally
latest: Pulling from docker/docker-bench-security
cd784148e348: Pull complete 
48fe0d48816d: Pull complete 
164e5e0f48c5: Pull complete 
378ed37ea5ff: Pull complete 
Digest: sha256:ddbdf4f86af4405da4a8a7b7cc62bb63bfeb75e85bf22d2ece70c204d7cfabb8
Status: Downloaded newer image for docker/docker-bench-security:latest
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Docker Bench for Security v1.3.4
#
# Docker, Inc. (c) 2015-
#
# Checks for dozens of common best-practices around deploying Docker containers in production.
# Inspired by the CIS Docker Community Edition Benchmark v1.1.0.
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Initializing Sat Apr 18 23:50:05 UTC 2020


[INFO] 1 - Host Configuration
[PASS] 1.1  - Ensure a separate partition for containers has been created
[NOTE] 1.2  - Ensure the container host has been Hardened
[INFO] 1.3  - Ensure Docker is up to date
[INFO]      * Using 19.03.4, verify is it up to date as deemed necessary
[INFO]      * Your operating system vendor may provide support and security maintenance for Docker
[INFO] 1.4  - Ensure only trusted users are allowed to control Docker daemon
[WARN] 1.5  - Ensure auditing is configured for the Docker daemon
[WARN] 1.6  - Ensure auditing is configured for Docker files and directories - /var/lib/docker
[WARN] 1.7  - Ensure auditing is configured for Docker files and directories - /etc/docker
[INFO] 1.8  - Ensure auditing is configured for Docker files and directories - docker.service
[INFO]      * File not found
[INFO] 1.9  - Ensure auditing is configured for Docker files and directories - docker.socket
[INFO]      * File not found
[INFO] 1.10  - Ensure auditing is configured for Docker files and directories - /etc/default/docker
[INFO]      * File not found
[WARN] 1.11  - Ensure auditing is configured for Docker files and directories - /etc/docker/daemon.json
[INFO] 1.12  - Ensure auditing is configured for Docker files and directories - /usr/bin/docker-containerd
[INFO]      * File not found
[INFO] 1.13  - Ensure auditing is configured for Docker files and directories - /usr/bin/docker-runc
[INFO]      * File not found


[INFO] 2 - Docker daemon configuration
[WARN] 2.1  - Ensure network traffic is restricted between containers on the default bridge
[PASS] 2.2  - Ensure the logging level is set to 'info'
[PASS] 2.3  - Ensure Docker is allowed to make changes to iptables
[WARN] 2.4  - Ensure insecure registries are not used
[PASS] 2.5  - Ensure aufs storage driver is not used
[INFO] 2.6  - Ensure TLS authentication for Docker daemon is configured
[INFO]      * Docker daemon not listening on TCP
[INFO] 2.7  - Ensure the default ulimit is configured appropriately
[INFO]      * Default ulimit doesn't appear to be set
[WARN] 2.8  - Enable user namespace support
[PASS] 2.9  - Ensure the default cgroup usage has been confirmed
[PASS] 2.10  - Ensure base device size is not changed until needed
[WARN] 2.11  - Ensure that authorization for Docker client commands is enabled
[WARN] 2.12  - Ensure centralized and remote logging is configured
[INFO] 2.13  - Ensure operations on legacy registry (v1) are Disabled (Deprecated)
[WARN] 2.14  - Ensure live restore is Enabled
[WARN] 2.15  - Ensure Userland Proxy is Disabled
[PASS] 2.16  - Ensure daemon-wide custom seccomp profile is applied, if needed
[WARN] 2.17  - Ensure experimental features are avoided in production
[WARN] 2.18  - Ensure containers are restricted from acquiring new privileges


[INFO] 3 - Docker daemon configuration files
[INFO] 3.1  - Ensure that docker.service file ownership is set to root:root
[INFO]      * File not found
[INFO] 3.2  - Ensure that docker.service file permissions are set to 644 or more restrictive
[INFO]      * File not found
[INFO] 3.3  - Ensure that docker.socket file ownership is set to root:root
[INFO]      * File not found
[INFO] 3.4  - Ensure that docker.socket file permissions are set to 644 or more restrictive
[INFO]      * File not found
[PASS] 3.5  - Ensure that /etc/docker directory ownership is set to root:root
[PASS] 3.6  - Ensure that /etc/docker directory permissions are set to 755 or more restrictive
[INFO] 3.7  - Ensure that registry certificate file ownership is set to root:root
[INFO]      * Directory not found
[INFO] 3.8  - Ensure that registry certificate file permissions are set to 444 or more restrictive
[INFO]      * Directory not found
[INFO] 3.9  - Ensure that TLS CA certificate file ownership is set to root:root
[INFO]      * No TLS CA certificate found
[INFO] 3.10  - Ensure that TLS CA certificate file permissions are set to 444 or more restrictive
[INFO]      * No TLS CA certificate found
[INFO] 3.11  - Ensure that Docker server certificate file ownership is set to root:root
[INFO]      * No TLS Server certificate found
[INFO] 3.12  - Ensure that Docker server certificate file permissions are set to 444 or more restrictive
[INFO]      * No TLS Server certificate found
[INFO] 3.13  - Ensure that Docker server certificate key file ownership is set to root:root
[INFO]      * No TLS Key found
[INFO] 3.14  - Ensure that Docker server certificate key file permissions are set to 400
[INFO]      * No TLS Key found
[WARN] 3.15  - Ensure that Docker socket file ownership is set to root:docker
[WARN]      * Wrong ownership for /var/run/docker.sock
[PASS] 3.16  - Ensure that Docker socket file permissions are set to 660 or more restrictive
[PASS] 3.17  - Ensure that daemon.json file ownership is set to root:root
[WARN] 3.18  - Ensure that daemon.json file permissions are set to 644 or more restrictive
[WARN]      * Wrong permissions for /etc/docker/daemon.json
[INFO] 3.19  - Ensure that /etc/default/docker file ownership is set to root:root
[INFO]      * File not found
[INFO] 3.20  - Ensure that /etc/default/docker file permissions are set to 644 or more restrictive
[INFO]      * File not found


[INFO] 4 - Container Images and Build File
[WARN] 4.1  - Ensure a user for the container has been created
[WARN]      * Running as root: charming_brahmagupta
[NOTE] 4.2  - Ensure that containers use trusted base images
[NOTE] 4.3  - Ensure unnecessary packages are not installed in the container
[NOTE] 4.4  - Ensure images are scanned and rebuilt to include security patches
[WARN] 4.5  - Ensure Content trust for Docker is Enabled
[WARN] 4.6  - Ensure HEALTHCHECK instructions have been added to the container image
[WARN]      * No Healthcheck found: [kalilinux/kali-rolling:latest]
[WARN]      * No Healthcheck found: [docker/whalesay:latest]
[WARN]      * No Healthcheck found: [vmwarecna/nginx:latest]
[INFO] 4.7  - Ensure update instructions are not use alone in the Dockerfile
[INFO]      * Update instruction found: [docker/whalesay:latest]
[INFO]      * Update instruction found: [vmwarecna/nginx:latest]
[NOTE] 4.8  - Ensure setuid and setgid permissions are removed in the images
[INFO] 4.9  - Ensure COPY is used instead of ADD in Dockerfile
[INFO]      * ADD in image history: [kalilinux/kali-rolling:latest]
[INFO]      * ADD in image history: [docker/docker-bench-security:latest]
[INFO]      * ADD in image history: [docker/whalesay:latest]
[INFO]      * ADD in image history: [vmwarecna/nginx:latest]
[NOTE] 4.10  - Ensure secrets are not stored in Dockerfiles
[NOTE] 4.11  - Ensure verified packages are only Installed


[INFO] 5 - Container Runtime
[PASS] 5.1  - Ensure AppArmor Profile is Enabled
[WARN] 5.2  - Ensure SELinux security options are set, if applicable
[WARN]      * No SecurityOptions Found: charming_brahmagupta
[PASS] 5.3  - Ensure Linux Kernel Capabilities are restricted within containers
[PASS] 5.4  - Ensure privileged containers are not used
[PASS] 5.5  - Ensure sensitive host system directories are not mounted on containers
[PASS] 5.6  - Ensure ssh is not run within containers
[WARN] 5.7  - Ensure privileged ports are not mapped within containers
[WARN]      * Privileged Port in use: 80 in charming_brahmagupta
[NOTE] 5.8  - Ensure only needed ports are open on the container
[PASS] 5.9  - Ensure the host's network namespace is not shared
[WARN] 5.10  - Ensure memory usage for container is limited
[WARN]      * Container running without memory restrictions: charming_brahmagupta
[WARN] 5.11  - Ensure CPU priority is set appropriately on the container
[WARN]      * Container running without CPU restrictions: charming_brahmagupta
[WARN] 5.12  - Ensure the container's root filesystem is mounted as read only
[WARN]      * Container running with root FS mounted R/W: charming_brahmagupta
[WARN] 5.13  - Ensure incoming container traffic is binded to a specific host interface
[WARN]      * Port being bound to wildcard IP: 0.0.0.0 in charming_brahmagupta
[WARN] 5.14  - Ensure 'on-failure' container restart policy is set to '5'
[WARN]      * MaximumRetryCount is not set to 5: charming_brahmagupta
[PASS] 5.15  - Ensure the host's process namespace is not shared
[PASS] 5.16  - Ensure the host's IPC namespace is not shared
[PASS] 5.17  - Ensure host devices are not directly exposed to containers
[INFO] 5.18  - Ensure the default ulimit is overwritten at runtime, only if needed
[INFO]      * Container no default ulimit override: charming_brahmagupta
[PASS] 5.19  - Ensure mount propagation mode is not set to shared
[PASS] 5.20  - Ensure the host's UTS namespace is not shared
[PASS] 5.21  - Ensure the default seccomp profile is not Disabled
[NOTE] 5.22  - Ensure docker exec commands are not used with privileged option
[NOTE] 5.23  - Ensure docker exec commands are not used with user option
[PASS] 5.24  - Ensure cgroup usage is confirmed
[WARN] 5.25  - Ensure the container is restricted from acquiring additional privileges
[WARN]      * Privileges not restricted: charming_brahmagupta
[WARN] 5.26  - Ensure container health is checked at runtime
[WARN]      * Health check not set: charming_brahmagupta
[INFO] 5.27  - Ensure docker commands always get the latest version of the image
[WARN] 5.28  - Ensure PIDs cgroup limit is used
[WARN]      * PIDs limit not set: charming_brahmagupta
[INFO] 5.29  - Ensure Docker's default bridge docker0 is not used
[INFO]      * Container in docker0 network: charming_brahmagupta
[PASS] 5.30  - Ensure the host's user namespaces is not shared
[PASS] 5.31  - Ensure the Docker socket is not mounted inside any containers


[INFO] 6 - Docker Security Operations
[INFO] 6.1  - Avoid image sprawl
[INFO]      * There are currently: 4 images
[INFO] 6.2  - Avoid container sprawl
[INFO]      * There are currently a total of 3 containers, with 2 of them currently running


[INFO] 7 - Docker Swarm Configuration
[PASS] 7.1  - Ensure swarm mode is not Enabled, if not needed
[PASS] 7.2  - Ensure the minimum number of manager nodes have been created in a swarm (Swarm mode not enabled)
[PASS] 7.3  - Ensure swarm services are binded to a specific host interface (Swarm mode not enabled)
[PASS] 7.4  - Ensure data exchanged between containers are encrypted on different nodes on the overlay network
[PASS] 7.5  - Ensure Docker's secret management commands are used for managing secrets in a Swarm cluster (Swarm mode not enabled)
[PASS] 7.6  - Ensure swarm manager is run in auto-lock mode (Swarm mode not enabled)
[PASS] 7.7  - Ensure swarm manager auto-lock key is rotated periodically (Swarm mode not enabled)
[PASS] 7.8  - Ensure node certificates are rotated as appropriate (Swarm mode not enabled)
[PASS] 7.9  - Ensure CA certificates are rotated as appropriate (Swarm mode not enabled)
[PASS] 7.10  - Ensure management plane traffic has been separated from data plane traffic (Swarm mode not enabled)

[INFO] Checks: 105
[INFO] Score: 7

Docker Content Trust

Docker Content Trust is a new feature incorporated into Docker 1.8. It is disabled by default, but once enabled, it allows you to verify the integrity, authenticity, and publication date of all Docker images from the Docker Hub Registry.

https://success.docker.com/article/introduction-to-docker-content-trust

Pull Images with Docker Content Trust

docker pull --disable-content-trust jpetazzo/clock

docker -D pull --disable-content-trust hello-world
docker -D pull hello-world
  • Temporarily disable content trust to successfully pull unsigned content:
  • Enable debug mode to compare the behavior of pulls where signed content is verified to pulls where no trust data is verified:
  • Enable Docker Content Trust:
    export DOCKER_CONTENT_TRUST=1
    
  • Try to pull unsigned content and observe error messages:
    docker pull jpetazzo/clock


How to Use PAM to Protect Cloud Assets:


KMS

docker pull luodaoyi/kms-server
docker run -d -p 1688:1688 --restart=always --name="kms" luodaoyi/kms-server

Configure Windows System to Use KMS server
slmgr /skms ip:1688
If you are using default port 1688, slmgr /skms ip
activate your machine
slmgr /ato
check activation status
slmgr /xpr


References

By Jon

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