Automated Audit using WAPITI

Last revision (mm/dd/yy): 02/19/2012 This type of article aims to provide to development team a easy/quick way to perform automated audit tests against their web application projects over implementation phase.

Description
This page have to objective to show a WAPITI sample command line to automate audit of a web application.

WAPITI is a free and open source tools to audit the security of your web applications (WAPITI homepage).

 The tools seems to be not updated since 2009 (according to last release and last SVN commit) but it can be used with others automated audit tools in order to have differents feedback on audited application security level.

This commad line do not replace a manual audit but can be useful to perform a first validation.

Command line
python wapiti.py http://mysite.com -n 10 -b folder -u -v 1 -f html -o /tmp/scan_report

Options used:
 * -n: Define a limit of urls to read with the same pattern (prevent endless loops), here limit to 10.
 * -b: Set the scope of the scan, here we analyse all the links to the pages which are in the same domain as the URL passed.
 * -u: Use color to highlight vulnerables parameters in output.
 * -v: Define verbosity level, here we print each url.
 * -f: Define report type, here we choose HTML format.
 * -o: Define report destination, in our case it must be a directory because we choose HTML format.

Attack modules used by WAPITI:
 * backup: This module search backup of scripts on the server.
 * blindsql: Time-based blind sql scanner.
 * crlf: Search for CR/LF injection in HTTP headers.
 * exec: Module used to detect command execution vulnerabilities.
 * file: Search for include/fread and other file handling vulns.
 * htaccess: Try to bypass weak htaccess configurations.
 * nikto: Use a Nikto database to search for potentially dangerous files.
 * permanentxss: Look for permanent XSS.
 * sql: Standard error-based SQL injection scanner.
 * xss: Module for XSS detection.

Report
A sample HTML report is available here.