Portspoof
Overview
Section titled “Overview”Portspoof is a sophisticated network deception tool that emulates legitimate services and responds to connection attempts with valid service signatures. It can bind to arbitrary ports and respond with authentic-looking banners and responses from popular services (HTTP, SSH, SMTP, DNS, etc.), deceiving port scanners, fingerprinting tools, and reconnaissance activities. Portspoof is primarily used for network defense, honeypots, and deception-based security strategies.
Installation
Section titled “Installation”Linux (Debian/Ubuntu)
Section titled “Linux (Debian/Ubuntu)”sudo apt-get install portspoof
Fedora/RHEL
Section titled “Fedora/RHEL”sudo dnf install portspoof
macOS (via Homebrew)
Section titled “macOS (via Homebrew)”brew install portspoof
Build from Source
Section titled “Build from Source”git clone https://github.com/drk1wi/portspoof.git
cd portspoof
./configure
make
sudo make install
Install Build Dependencies
Section titled “Install Build Dependencies”sudo apt-get install build-essential autoconf automake libtool
Verify Installation
Section titled “Verify Installation”portspoof --version
portspoof --help
Core Concepts
Section titled “Core Concepts”Service Emulation
Section titled “Service Emulation”Portspoof emulates legitimate service responses to appear as if real services are running.
Port Mapping
Section titled “Port Mapping”Map arbitrary ports to service signatures, creating convincing decoy services.
Signature Database
Section titled “Signature Database”Includes extensive database of authentic service banners and responses.
Network Deception
Section titled “Network Deception”Confuse attackers and automated scanning tools by presenting false service information.
Configuration
Section titled “Configuration”Main Configuration File
Section titled “Main Configuration File”/etc/portspoof/portspoof.conf
/usr/local/etc/portspoof.conf
Service Signatures Database
Section titled “Service Signatures Database”/usr/share/portspoof/portspoof_signatures
/etc/portspoof/portspoof_signatures
View Default Configuration
Section titled “View Default Configuration”cat /etc/portspoof/portspoof.conf
Basic Commands
Section titled “Basic Commands”Start Portspoof
Section titled “Start Portspoof”sudo portspoof
sudo portspoof -c /etc/portspoof/portspoof.conf
Start on Specific Port
Section titled “Start on Specific Port”sudo portspoof -p 8888
Run in Foreground (Debug)
Section titled “Run in Foreground (Debug)”sudo portspoof -d
Specify Configuration File
Section titled “Specify Configuration File”sudo portspoof -c /custom/path/portspoof.conf
Start with Specific Signature Database
Section titled “Start with Specific Signature Database”sudo portspoof -s /path/to/signatures
Common Usage Patterns
Section titled “Common Usage Patterns”| Command | Description |
|---|---|
sudo portspoof | Start with default configuration |
sudo portspoof -p 9999 | Run on custom port |
sudo portspoof -d | Debug mode (foreground) |
sudo portspoof -c config.conf | Use custom config |
sudo portspoof -s signatures.txt | Load custom signatures |
sudo portspoof -l 192.168.1.100 | Bind to specific interface |
Configuration File Setup
Section titled “Configuration File Setup”Basic Configuration Template
Section titled “Basic Configuration Template”# Portspoof Configuration File
#
# Server settings
SERVER_PORT=9999
SERVER_BIND_ADDR=0.0.0.0
SERVER_LISTEN_QUEUE=500
# Service signature database
SIGNATURES_FILE=/usr/share/portspoof/portspoof_signatures
# Logging
LOG_FILE=/var/log/portspoof/portspoof.log
VERBOSITY_LEVEL=1
# Performance
MAX_THREADS=100
INITIAL_THREADS=10
Custom Port Configuration
Section titled “Custom Port Configuration”SERVER_PORT=8888
SERVER_BIND_ADDR=192.168.1.100
SIGNATURES_FILE=/etc/portspoof/custom_signatures
High-Volume Configuration
Section titled “High-Volume Configuration”SERVER_PORT=9999
MAX_THREADS=500
INITIAL_THREADS=50
SERVER_LISTEN_QUEUE=1000
Service Signatures
Section titled “Service Signatures”View Available Signatures
Section titled “View Available Signatures”cat /usr/share/portspoof/portspoof_signatures | head -20
HTTP Service Signature
Section titled “HTTP Service Signature”HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/html
Content-Length: 1234
Server: Apache/2.4.41
<html><head><title>Index of /</title></head><body>
<h1>Index of /</h1>
...
</body></html>
SSH Service Signature
Section titled “SSH Service Signature”SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_7.4
SMTP Service Signature
Section titled “SMTP Service Signature”220 mail.example.com ESMTP Postfix
FTP Service Signature
Section titled “FTP Service Signature”220 FTP Server Ready
Telnet Response
Section titled “Telnet Response”Connected to server
login:
Create Custom Signatures
Section titled “Create Custom Signatures”cat > custom_signatures.txt << 'EOF'
# Port 80 HTTP
"GET / HTTP/1.1" "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\nServer: Apache/2.4.41\r\n\r\n"
# Port 22 SSH
"SSH-2.0" "SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_7.4\r\n"
# Port 25 SMTP
"EHLO\|HELO" "220 mail.example.com ESMTP Postfix\r\n"
# Port 3389 RDP
".*" "\x03\x00\x00\x13\x0e\xe0\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x01\x00\x08\x00\x03\x00\x00\x00"
# Port 445 SMB
".*" "\xff\x53\x4d\x42"
EOF
Network Deception Strategies
Section titled “Network Deception Strategies”Honeypot Port Setup
Section titled “Honeypot Port Setup”# Configure portspoof to emulate multiple services
sudo portspoof -c honeypot.conf
# Monitor connections
tail -f /var/log/portspoof/portspoof.log
Decoy Network Service
Section titled “Decoy Network Service”# Emulate multiple services on single port
sudo portspoof -p 9999 -s decoy_signatures.txt
Port Obfuscation
Section titled “Port Obfuscation”# Make all ports appear to have services
# Map every connection to realistic service responses
Advanced Deployment
Section titled “Advanced Deployment”Multi-Interface Binding
Section titled “Multi-Interface Binding”# Create config for multiple interfaces
cat > multi_interface.conf << 'EOF'
SERVER_PORT=9999
SERVER_BIND_ADDR=0.0.0.0
SIGNATURES_FILE=/usr/share/portspoof/portspoof_signatures
EOF
sudo portspoof -c multi_interface.conf
Load Balancing Setup
Section titled “Load Balancing Setup”# Run multiple portspoof instances
sudo portspoof -p 9999 &
sudo portspoof -p 9998 &
sudo portspoof -p 9997 &
Systemd Service Configuration
Section titled “Systemd Service Configuration”cat > /etc/systemd/system/portspoof.service << 'EOF'
[Unit]
Description=Portspoof Service Emulation
After=network.target
[Service]
Type=simple
User=root
ExecStart=/usr/bin/portspoof -c /etc/portspoof/portspoof.conf
Restart=on-failure
RestartSec=10
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
EOF
sudo systemctl enable portspoof
sudo systemctl start portspoof
Testing Portspoof Responses
Section titled “Testing Portspoof Responses”Test Connection
Section titled “Test Connection”nc -zv localhost 9999
nc -zv 192.168.1.100 9999
Capture Service Banner
Section titled “Capture Service Banner”echo "" | nc 192.168.1.100 9999
timeout 2 nc 192.168.1.100 9999 | od -c
Verify HTTP Response
Section titled “Verify HTTP Response”curl -v http://127.0.0.1:9999/
Test SSH Response
Section titled “Test SSH Response”ssh -v localhost -p 9999
Nmap Service Detection
Section titled “Nmap Service Detection”nmap -sV 127.0.0.1 -p 9999
nmap -sV -A 192.168.1.100 -p 9999
Zenmap Fingerprinting
Section titled “Zenmap Fingerprinting”# Test against Zenmap/Nmap OS detection
nmap -O 127.0.0.1 -p 9999
Monitoring and Logging
Section titled “Monitoring and Logging”View Portspoof Logs
Section titled “View Portspoof Logs”tail -f /var/log/portspoof/portspoof.log
grep "connection" /var/log/portspoof/portspoof.log
Monitor Active Connections
Section titled “Monitor Active Connections”sudo netstat -antp | grep portspoof
sudo lsof -i :9999
Real-time Connection Tracking
Section titled “Real-time Connection Tracking”watch -n 1 "netstat -antp | grep portspoof"
Parse Connection Attempts
Section titled “Parse Connection Attempts”grep "from" /var/log/portspoof/portspoof.log | \
awk '{print $NF}' | sort | uniq -c | sort -rn
Honeypot Integration
Section titled “Honeypot Integration”Combine with IDS
Section titled “Combine with IDS”# Log portspoof connections
tail -f /var/log/portspoof/portspoof.log | \
while read line; do
# Alert on suspicious IPs
echo "$line" | grep -i attack >> suspicious.log
done
Network Tapering
Section titled “Network Tapering”# Use portspoof to confuse network scans
# Deploy on decoy systems
# Monitor all connection attempts
Create Honeypot Network
Section titled “Create Honeypot Network”# Isolated network segment with portspoof
# Running on multiple ports
# Monitoring all traffic
Performance Tuning
Section titled “Performance Tuning”Optimize for High Load
Section titled “Optimize for High Load”cat > high_load.conf << 'EOF'
MAX_THREADS=1000
INITIAL_THREADS=100
SERVER_LISTEN_QUEUE=5000
TIMEOUT=30
EOF
sudo portspoof -c high_load.conf
Resource Limits
Section titled “Resource Limits”ulimit -n 10000
ulimit -u 1000
Process Monitoring
Section titled “Process Monitoring”ps aux | grep portspoof
top -p $(pgrep portspoof)
Troubleshooting
Section titled “Troubleshooting”Permission Denied (Port < 1024)
Section titled “Permission Denied (Port < 1024)”# Use sudo for ports below 1024
sudo portspoof -p 80
# Or run as root
su - -c "portspoof -p 80"
Port Already in Use
Section titled “Port Already in Use”# Check existing bindings
sudo netstat -tlnp | grep :9999
# Kill existing process
sudo kill $(lsof -t -i :9999)
Configuration File Not Found
Section titled “Configuration File Not Found”# Verify file exists and permissions
ls -la /etc/portspoof/portspoof.conf
cat /etc/portspoof/portspoof.conf
Signature File Issues
Section titled “Signature File Issues”# Check signature file
ls -la /usr/share/portspoof/portspoof_signatures
file /usr/share/portspoof/portspoof_signatures
Service Not Starting
Section titled “Service Not Starting”# Run in debug mode
sudo portspoof -d
# Check for errors
sudo systemctl status portspoof
sudo journalctl -u portspoof -n 20
Security Considerations
Section titled “Security Considerations”Network Placement
Section titled “Network Placement”- Deploy on internal networks only
- Ensure controlled environment
- Document deception strategy
- Monitor for false positives
Ethical Usage
Section titled “Ethical Usage”- Use only in authorized networks
- Document deception policies
- Ensure team awareness
- Legal compliance verification
Detection and Analysis
Section titled “Detection and Analysis”# Monitor portspoof system
watch -n 5 "netstat -antp | grep portspoof"
tail -f /var/log/portspoof/portspoof.log | grep -v "^$"
Advanced Scenarios
Section titled “Advanced Scenarios”Multi-Service Honeypot
Section titled “Multi-Service Honeypot”# Emulate multiple services on different ports
sudo portspoof -p 80 -s http_signatures &
sudo portspoof -p 22 -s ssh_signatures &
sudo portspoof -p 25 -s smtp_signatures &
sudo portspoof -p 3306 -s mysql_signatures &
Incident Response Preparation
Section titled “Incident Response Preparation”# Setup decoy environment
# Monitor attacker interaction
# Collect forensic evidence
# Analyze attack patterns
Threat Intelligence Gathering
Section titled “Threat Intelligence Gathering”# Deploy honeypot
# Record all connection attempts
# Analyze attacker behavior
# Share findings with community
Best Practices
Section titled “Best Practices”- Clear Documentation: Document deception strategy
- Regular Updates: Keep signature database current
- Monitoring: Actively monitor honeypot
- Isolation: Properly segment honeypot network
- Incident Response: Have plan for detected attacks
- Legal Review: Verify compliance with regulations
- Team Coordination: Ensure all team members aware
- Log Retention: Archive connection logs
Related Tools
Section titled “Related Tools”- Honeyd: Virtual honeypot framework
- Cowrie: SSH/Telnet honeypot
- Kippo: Medium interaction honeypot
- Dionaea: Low interaction honeypot
- Snare/Tanner: Web application honeypot
- Suricata: Network security monitoring
- Zeek: Network analysis framework