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 windows2008
to build the Windows box or./build.sh ubuntu1404
to 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 windows2008
to build the Windows box or.\build.ps1 ubuntu1404
to 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 up
to 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:
vagrant
and P:vagrant
.
- Clone this repo and navigate to the main directory.
- Build the base VM image by running
packer build -- ./packer/templates/windows_2008_r2.json
where<provider>
is your preferred virtualization platform. Currentlyvirtualbox-iso
,qemu
, andvmware-iso
providers 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-reload
to 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.