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Posts: 60 | Thanked: 104 times | Joined on Dec 2009
#2
Funny, the first thing I did when I first read news about it was to google for "n900 reaver wps"

Now I did it again and found your post.

I would like to try against my different APs, too.
N900 was my first thought, would be nice ...


EDIT 03.01.2012:

Reaver v1.3 is working on n900 - Requirements:


Latest changes to code:

http://code.google.com/p/reaver-wps/source/list


Known Problems:

http://code.google.com/p/reaver-wps/issues/list








Maemo SDK


In Maemo SDK start a terminal, download the sources:

Code:
cd /scratchbox/users/maemo/home/maemo/workspace/

wget http://reaver-wps.googlecode.com/files/reaver-1.3.tar.gz

tar xzvf reaver-1.3.tar.gz

Optional - get latest source code using svn

Code:
svn checkout http://reaver-wps.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ reaver-wps-read-only



Edit Makefiles, change crT to cr (removing the T):



Code:
nano reaver-1.3/src/crypto/Makefile
nano reaver-1.3/src/tls/Makefile
nano reaver-1.3/src/utils/Makefile

Compile sourcecode

Code:
/scratchbox/login

sb-conf select FREMANTLE_ARMEL

apt-get update

apt-get install libpcap0.8-dev libpcap0.8

cd reaver-1.3/src

./configure

make

ls

Now you should see 2 compiled binaries:










Text from reaver README

Code:
OVERVIEW

	Reaver performs a brute force attack against an access point's WiFi Protected Setup pin number. 
	Once the WPS pin is found, the WPA PSK can be recovered and alternately the AP's wireless settings can be 
	reconfigured.

	While Reaver does not support reconfiguring the AP, this can be accomplished with wpa_supplicant once 
	the WPS pin is known.

DESCRIPTION

	Reaver targets the external registrar functionality mandated by the WiFi Protected Setup specification.
	Access points will provide authenticated registrars with their current wireless configuration (including
	the WPA PSK), and also accept a new configuration from the registrar.

	In order to authenticate as a registrar, the registrar must prove its knowledge of the AP's 8-digit pin
	number. Registrars may authenticate themselves to an AP at any time without any user interaction. Because
	the WPS protocol is conducted over EAP, the registrar need only be associated with the AP and does not 
	need any prior knowledge of the wireless encryption or configuration.

	Reaver performs a brute force attack against the AP, attempting every possible combination in order to
	guess the AP's 8 digit pin number. Since the pin numbers are all numeric, there are 10^8 (100,000,000) 
	possible values for any given pin number. However, because the last digit of the pin is a checksum value
	which can be calculated based on the previous 7 digits, that key space is reduced to 10^7 (10,000,000) 
	possible values.

	The key space is reduced even further due to the fact that the WPS authentication protocol cuts the pin in
	half and validates each half individually. That means that there are 10^4 (10,000) possible values for the
	first half of the pin and 10^3 (1,000) possible values for the second half of the pin, with the last digit
	of the pin being a checksum.
	
	Reaver brute forces the first half of the pin and then the second half of the pin, meaning that the entire 
	key space for the WPS pin number can be exhausted in 11,000 attempts. The speed at which Reaver can test 
	pin numbers is entirely limited by the speed at which the AP can process WPS requests. Some APs are fast enough 
	that one pin can be tested every second; others are slower and only allow one pin every ten seconds. Statistically, 
	it will only take half of that time in order to guess the correct pin number.
	

INSTALLATION

	Reaver is only supported on the Linux platform, requires the libpcap library, and can be built and 
	installed by running:

		$ ./configure
		$ make
		# make install

	To remove everything installed/created by Reaver:

		# make distclean

USAGE

	Usually, the only required arguments to Reaver are the interface name and the BSSID of the target AP:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05

	The channel and SSID (provided that the SSID is not cloaked) of the target AP will be automatically 
	identified by Reaver, unless explicitly specified on the command line:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 -c 11 -e linksys

	Since version 1.3, Reaver implements the small DH key optimization as suggested by Stefan which can
	speed up the attack speed:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 --dh-small

	By default, if the AP switches channels, Reaver will also change its channel accordingly. However,
	this feature may be disabled by fixing the interface's channel:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 --fixed

	The default receive timeout period is 5 seconds. This timeout period can be set manually if necessary
	(minimum timeout period is 1 second):

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 -t 2

	The default delay period between pin attempts is 1 second. This value can be increased or decreased
	to any non-negative integer value. A value of zero means no delay:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 -d 0

	Some APs will temporarily lock their WPS state, typically for five minutes or less, when "suspicious" 
	activity is detected. By default when a locked state is detected, Reaver will check the state every
	315 seconds (5 minutes and 15 seconds) and not continue brute forcing pins until the WPS state is unlocked. 
	This check can be increased or decreased to any non-negative integer value:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 --lock-delay=250
	
	For additional output, the verbose option may be provided. Providing the verbose option twice will
	increase verbosity and display each pin number as it is attempted:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 -vv

	The default timeout period for receiving the M5 and M7 WPS response messages is .1 seconds. This
        timeout period can be set manually if necessary (max timeout period is 1 second):

                # reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 -T .5

	Some poor WPS implementations will drop a connection on the floor when an invalid pin is supplied 
	instead of responding with a NACK message as the specs dictate. To account for this, if an M5/M7 timeout 
	is reached, it is treated the same as a NACK by default. However, if it is known that the target AP sends 
	NACKS (most do), this feature can be disabled to ensure better reliability. This option is largely useless
	as Reaver will auto-detect if an AP properly responds with NACKs or not:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 --nack

	While most APs don't care, sending an EAP FAIL message to close out a WPS session is sometimes necessary.
	By default this feature is disabled, but can be enabled for those APs that need it:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 --eap-terminate

	When 10 consecutive unexpected WPS errors are encountered, a warning message will be displayed. Since this
	may be a sign that the AP is rate limiting pin attempts or simply being overloaded, a sleep can be put in
	place that will occur whenever these warning messages appear:

		# reaver -i mon0 -b 00:01:02:03:04:05 --fail-wait=360

FILES

	The following are Reaver source files:

		o 80211.c	Functions for reading, sending, and parsing 802.11 management frames
		o builder.c	Functions for building packets and packet headers
		o config.h	Generated by the configure script
		o cracker.c	Core cracking functions for Reaver.
		o defs.h	Common header with most required definitions and declarations
		o exchange.c	Functions for initiating and processing a WPS exchange
		o globule.c	Wrapper functions for accessing global settings
		o iface.c	Network interface functions
		o init.c	Initialization functions
		o keys.c	Contains tables of all possible pins
		o misc.c	Mac address conversion, debug print functions, etc
		o pins.c	Pin generation and randomization functions
		o send.c	Functions for sending WPS response messages
		o sigalrm.c	Functions for handling SIGALRM interrupts
		o sigint.c	Functions for handling SIGINT interrupts
		o wpscrack.c	Main Reaver source file
		o wps.h		Includes for wps wpa_supplicant functions
		o libwps/*	Generic library code for parsing WPS information elements

	The following files have been taken from wpa_supplicant. Some have been modified from their original sources:

		o common/*
		o crypto/*
		o tls/*
		o utils/*
		o wps/*

	The lwe directory contains Wireless Tools version 29, used for interfacing with Linux Wireless Extensions.

Last edited by meShell; 2012-01-06 at 16:47.
 

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