From charlesreid1

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From [http://www.aircrack-ng.org/doku.php?id=injection_test this site]: "If you get a failure on attack 5, it may still work in the field if the injection MAC address matches the current card MAC address. With some drivers, it will fail if they are not the same."





Revision as of 20:08, 30 July 2015

Basic Injection Test

In order to confirm that packet injection works, you can use aireplay-ng in packet injection test mode (mode 9). The command looks like this:

$ aireplay-ng -9 -a AA:BB:CC:DD:EE wlan2mon 

where -9 or --test tells it to operate in packet injection test mode, -a AA:BB:CC:DD:EE is the MAC address of the target access point, wlan2mon is the wireless device that has already been put into monitoring mode with airomon-ng.

Here's what the output should look like:

$ aireplay-ng -9 -a AA:BB:CC:DD:EE wlan2mon 
12:47:05  Waiting for beacon frame (BSSID: AA:BB:CC:DD:EE) on channel 7
12:47:05  Trying broadcast probe requests...
12:47:06  Injection is working!
12:47:07  Found 1 AP 

12:47:07  Trying directed probe requests...
12:47:07  AA:BB:CC:DD:EE - channel: 7 - 'Walrus'
12:47:08  Ping (min/avg/max): 0.891ms/15.899ms/32.832ms Power: -21.72
12:47:08  29/30:  96%

Attack Tests

Now you can insert a second wireless card into the laptop (I used a second USB dongle of the same type/manufacturer/chipset).

File:TwoWirelessDongles.jpg

Setup

Look for it in the list:

$ airmon-ng

In my case it was called wlan3. Now bring it online:

$ airmon-ng start wlan3

This will rename the device to wlan3mon. List wireless devices again:

$ airmon-ng

If you want to test your new wireless card really quick, you can do:

$ aireplay-ng -9 wlan3mon

Get Wireless Devices on Same Channel

Now get both cards listening on the same channel. Run a quick airodump-ng command for the new wireless card to ensure it's listening on the right channel:

$ airdoump-ng -bssid AA:BB:CC:DD:EE -c 7 -w /tmp/junk wlan3mon

and kill it as soon as you've run it. This will switch the card to channel 7 (or, our channel of choice) and make sure both cards are on the same channel.

Run Attack Test

Now you can run the attack test:

$ aireplay-ng -9 -i wlan3mon wlan2mon

And the output:

$ aireplay-ng -9 -i wlan3mon wlan2mon
13:05:50  Trying broadcast probe requests...
13:05:50  Injection is working!
13:05:51  Found 3 APs

13:05:51  Trying directed probe requests...
13:05:51  AA:BB:CC:DD:EE - channel: 7 - 'Walrus'
13:05:52  Ping (min/avg/max): 1.273ms/20.986ms/33.943ms Power: -26.67
13:05:52  30/30: 100%

13:05:52  34:95:3B:84:5C:18 - channel: 7 - ''
13:05:53  Ping (min/avg/max): 5.004ms/28.884ms/64.336ms Power: -30.13
13:05:53  30/30: 100%

13:05:53  F7:71:85:13:6A:4B - channel: 7 - 'Dee'
13:05:54  Ping (min/avg/max): 1.262ms/8.353ms/31.431ms Power: -60.40
13:05:54  25/30:  83%

13:05:54  Trying card-to-card injection...
13:05:54  Attack -0:           OK
13:05:54  Attack -1 (open):    OK
13:05:54  Attack -1 (psk):     OK
13:05:54  Attack -2/-3/-4/-6:  OK
13:05:58  Attack -5/-7:        Failed

From this site: "If you get a failure on attack 5, it may still work in the field if the injection MAC address matches the current card MAC address. With some drivers, it will fail if they are not the same."