Widy/Post Install
From charlesreid1
Imagine a wireless aircraft carrier, communication systems up, radios on, ears open, listening carefully, avoiding being observed itself. Attack aircraft come and go from the deck. It's launching dozens of attacks, readying more, and packed full of goodies to keep it running for the long term.
Now imagine the equivalent for wireless attacks. That's what this little TP Link battery powered router will become, when we're through with it.
The Procedure
We'll start by upgrading the on-board software, and installing some tools of our own.
Install Software Packages
Once again we'll use opkg to install packages.
Wireless Toolz
Let's ugprade our wireless toolz.
$ opkg update $ opkg install wireless-tools
Other Stuffs with opkg
There's lots of goodies in the opkg package lists, too. First, general-purpose utilities:
$ opkg install screen $ opkg install wget $ opkg install python $ opkg install nmap $ opkg install tcpdump
Now tools for wireless attacks:
$ opkg install aircrack-ng $ opkg install kmod-tun # for airbase-ng to work $ opkg install macchanger $ opkg install mdk3 $ opkg install reaver $ opkg install snort $ opkg install wavemon
and yet more tools, some still unfamiliar:
$ opkg install kismet-server kismet-drone kismet-client $ opkg install airpwn
Networking tools:
$ opkg install squid $ opkg install ettercap
Installing Python Packages
Remember that OpenWrt is designed for tiny systems, so the Python installation is minimal - no pip. But you can still install python packages the old fashioned way:
python setup.py build python setup.py install
Writing Toolz
$ opkg install git
Using git will allow us to share our work across computers, and develop scripts on a laptop to run on the device.
From the router, run this command to clone something on the local network (which you're still connected to with the on-board wifi):
$ git clone user@10.0.0.100:/path/to/project.name
This should ask you for a password, just like SSH (or not, if you have SSH keys).
This will add the remote address 10.0.0.100 as "origin", which I like to rename.