WhatWeb identifies websites. Its goal is to answer the question, “What is that Website?”. WhatWeb recognises web technologies including content management systems (CMS), blogging platforms, statistic/analytics packages, JavaScript libraries, web servers, and embedded devices. WhatWeb has over 1500 plugins, each to recognise something different. WhatWeb also identifies version numbers, email addresses, account IDs, web framework modules, SQL errors, and more.
WhatWeb can be stealthy and fast, or thorough but slow. WhatWeb supports an aggression level to control the tradeoff between speed and reliability. When you visit a website in your browser, the transaction includes many hints of what web technologies are powering that website. Sometimes a single webpage visit contains enough information to identify a website but when it does not, WhatWeb can interrogate the website further. The default level of aggression, called ‘stealthy’, is the fastest and requires only one HTTP request of a website. This is suitable for scanning public websites. More aggressive modes were developed for use in penetration tests.
Most WhatWeb plugins are thorough and recognise a range of cues from subtle to obvious. For example, most WordPress websites can be identified by the meta HTML tag, e.g. meta name="generator" content="WordPress 2.6.5"
, but a minority of WordPress websites remove this identifying tag but this does not thwart WhatWeb. The WordPress WhatWeb plugin has over 15 tests, which include checking the favicon, default installation files, login pages, and checking for “/wp-content/” within relative links.
We wrote about WhatWeb way back in 2010, and there actually hasn’t been a release since 2011 (v0.4.7). I was glad to find however it still is under active development and there is work being done on what is going to become 0.4.8 at some point, it has many changes (as listed below) but hasn’t yet been released.
But due to the wonders of technology, you can grab the unreleased development version from Github now (link also below).
Over 1700 plugins
Control the trade-off between speed/stealth and reliability
Performance tuning. Control how many websites to scan concurrently.
Multiple log formats: Brief (greppable), Verbose (human readable), XML, JSON, MagicTree, RubyObject, MongoDB.
Proxy support including TOR
Custom HTTP headers
Basic HTTP authentication
Control over webpage redirection
Nmap-style IP ranges
Fuzzy matching
Result certainty awareness
Custom plugins defined on the command line
Added over 700 new plugins
Added aggressive version detection using md5 static file matches to several plugins
Added support for raw HTTP headers when scanning local files
Added –dorks to return google dorks for the selected plugin
Added google dorks to more than 500 plugins
Added ./addons/hunter
Added ./addons/gggooglescan
Added ./addons/country-scanner
Added SQL logging with --log-sql
and --log-sql-create
arguments.
Added raw header support by monkey patching the net/http library
Added context searching for plugin matches[].
Added the matches keyword, :search.
Added methods for aggressive plugins to send HEAD and POST requests
Added –grep, -g option to be easier than –custom-plugin.
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