Reconnaissance & OSINT Automation
Passive and active reconnaissance, subdomain enumeration, DNS analysis, technology fingerprinting, and OSINT data correlation for authorized security assessments
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/Masriyan/Claude-Code-CyberSecurity-Skill /tmp/reconnaissance-osint-automation && cp -r /tmp/reconnaissance-osint-automation/skills/01-recon-osint ~/.claude/skills/reconnaissance-osint-automationSKILL.md
# Reconnaissance & OSINT Automation ## Purpose Enable Claude to conduct comprehensive reconnaissance and open-source intelligence gathering during authorized security assessments. Claude performs passive and active recon using its native analysis capabilities and orchestrates the included scripts for automation at scale. > **Authorization Required**: Always confirm written authorization for the target scope before proceeding. Unauthorized reconnaissance is illegal in most jurisdictions. --- ## Activation Triggers This skill activates when the user asks about: - Subdomain enumeration or discovery - DNS reconnaissance, zone transfers, or DNS record analysis - OSINT gathering on a domain, organization, or person - Technology fingerprinting or stack identification - Port scanning, service detection, or banner grabbing - Google dorking or advanced search query generation - WHOIS, certificate transparency, or Shodan queries - Attack surface mapping or perimeter discovery --- ## Prerequisites ```bash pip install requests dnspython python-whois beautifulsoup4 shodan ``` **Optional enhanced capabilities:** - `nmap` — Active port scanning - `amass` — Advanced subdomain enumeration - `theHarvester` — Email and domain harvesting - Shodan API key — Internet-wide device search - Censys API key — Certificate and host search --- ## Core Capabilities ### 1. Passive Reconnaissance (No Direct Target Contact) **When the user asks for passive recon or OSINT:** 1. **WHOIS Analysis** — Query domain registration records for registrant, registrar, nameservers, and dates. Flag privacy-protected registrations and registrar patterns. 2. **Certificate Transparency Logs** — Search crt.sh for all certificates issued to the domain and subdomains. Extract SANs (Subject Alternative Names) to discover hidden subdomains. 3. **DNS Records (Passive)** — Enumerate A, AAAA, MX, NS, TXT, SOA, SRV, and CNAME records using public resolvers. Analyze SPF, DKIM, and DMARC for email security posture. 4. **Search Engine Dorking** — Generate targeted dork queries to discover exposed files, login portals, and configuration leaks: - `site:target.com filetype:pdf` — Exposed documents - `site:target.com inurl:admin` — Admin panels - `site:target.com ext:env OR ext:config` — Config files - `"@target.com" site:linkedin.com` — Employee enumeration - `"target.com" site:pastebin.com` — Credential leaks 5. **Shodan/Censys Queries** — Search for internet-exposed services, open ports, banners, and vulnerabilities associated with the target's IP ranges. 6. **Git/Code Repository Search** — Search GitHub/GitLab for leaked credentials, API keys, and internal information: - `org:targetorg api_key` - `filename:.env target.com` - `"target.com" password` ### 2. Subdomain Enumeration **When the user asks to enumerate subdomains:** 1. **Certificate Transparency** — Extract all SANs from crt.sh/Censys certificates (most effective passive method) 2. **DNS Brute-Force** — Run subdomain_enum.py against the common wordlist in `resources/` 3. **Wildcard Detection** — Query random subdomains to detect wildcard DNS responses and filter false positives 4. **Resolution Validation** — Resolve all candidates to IP addresses; discard NXDOMAINs 5. **HTTP Probing** — Check which subdomains respond on ports 80/443; identify web applications 6. **Infrastructure Grouping** — Group discovered subdomains by IP/ASN to map cloud vs. on-prem assets **Output format for subdomain findings:** ``` Target: example.com Discovery Method: CT Logs + DNS Brute-Force Discovered: 47 subdomains LIVE SUBDOMAINS: admin.example.com → 203.0.113.10 [HTTP 200] [nginx/1.18] dev.example.com → 203.0.113.11 [HTTP 302 → /login] api.example.com → 203.0.113.12 [HTTP 200] [cloudflare] internal.example.com → 10.0.0.5 [No public response — internal?] INFRASTRUCTURE CLUSTERS: 203.0.113.10-15 → AS12345 (Company Hosting) Cloudflare CDN → 7 subdomains proxied ``` ### 3. Active Port Scanning & Service Detection **When the user asks to scan ports or detect services:** 1. Define scan scope (host, subnet, CIDR range) and confirm authorization 2. Select scan technique: SYN scan (requires root), connect scan (no root), or stealth options 3. Run top-1000 ports first, then targeted service ports 4. Perform service version detection (`-sV`) on all open ports 5. Run OS fingerprinting (`-O`) if authorized 6. Grab banners from discovered services 7. Flag services with known vulnerabilities based on version data **Provide Nmap commands ready to run:** ```bash # Quick discovery nmap -sn 203.0.113.0/24 # Top 1000 TCP ports with service detection nmap -sV -sC --top-ports 1000 -oA scan_results 203.0.113.10 # Full port scan with script engine nmap -sV -sC -p- -T4 -oA full_scan 203.0.113.10 ``` ### 4. DNS Reconnaissance **When the user asks for DNS analysis:** 1. Enumerate all record types: A, AAAA, MX, NS, TXT, SOA, SRV, CNAME, PTR 2. **Zone Transfer Attempt** (AXFR) — Try against all discovered nameservers: ```bash dig AXFR @ns1.example.com example.com ``` 3. **Email Security Analysis:** - SPF: Check for `~all` (softfail) or `?all` (neutral) — both are weak - DMARC: Missing DMARC = zero enforcement; `p=none` = monitoring only - DKIM: Check selector existence and key strength 4. **Reverse DNS** — PTR lookups on all discovered IPs to find additional hostnames 5. **DNS History** — Check SecurityTrails or PassiveDNS for historical DNS records that may reveal old infrastructure **Flag these misconfigurations:** - Zone transfer allowed → Exposes full DNS zone - No DMARC record → Email spoofing possible - SPF `+all` → Any server can send as this domain - DNSSEC not configured → DNS cache poisoning risk ### 5. Technology Fingerprinting **When the user asks to fingerprint technology:** 1. Analyze HTTP response headers: - `Server:` → Web server and version - `X-Powered-By:` → Application framework - `Set-Cooki
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