RFID with the Proxmark3
The proxmark is an RFID security tool that is capable of reading from and writing to a range of different RFID cards. Usually RFID readers and writers come from a hardware vendor that only works with a specific frequency and card type. This is much the same as WiFi radios, they are only designed for a narrow frequency set and to talk a single protocol. The proxmark is a swiss army knife of RFID. You could also think of it as a software-defined radio for RFID. Like a lot of security testing tools, it is designed with the expert in mind and does not come with a point and click GUI
Start by plugging the Proxmark into your computer and connecting it through to your Ubuntu virtual machine.
Then:
Perform a:
sudo dmesg | grep -i USB
to check that the proxmark looks visible oven USB. Then:
cd proxmark3
Contents
Using the Proxmark 3
Then you can start proxmark with
./pm3
Have a play with the following commands:
[usb] pm3 --> hw status [usb] pm3 --> hw version [usb] pm3 --> hw tune
To get an overview of the available commands for LF RFID and HF RFID:
[usb] pm3 --> lf [usb] pm3 --> hf
To search quickly for known LF or HF tags:
[usb] pm3 --> lf search [usb] pm3 --> hf search
Tune for LF and HF
If you are having trouble getting a read try
lf tune --mix
OR
hf tune --mix
Here you are looking for the card to "couple". So the lower the voltage drops the more the RFID card is drawing from the system and the better the read you will get.
Start your Skills Test here
At this point, you are ready to start your skills test. Use the materials below as well as your tutor as a guide to complete your skills test as a group.
LF T5577 card
If you think this could be a T55xx you can run a:
lf t55 detect
This should return the type of card. You can then examine the datasheet here: http://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/ATA5577C-Read-Write-LF-RFID-IDIC-100-to-150-kHz-Data-Sheet-DS70005357B.pdf
You can try to read all of the blocks with the following command:
lf t55xx dump
This should dump all the blocks on the t55xx card
HF Mifare
High Frequency Mifare cards are also super common. You should be able to detect one with the standard:
hf search
If you find a tag record what sort of tag you think it could be. Try just typing:
hf
This should reveal all the different types of cards that can be read. Try to correlate the previous info from hf search against the info that you see in the image to the right. You could now try a:
hf mfu info
If that reveals that it is a gen 1a then you could consider executing a command frame the following block:
Often the proxmark software will prompt you for a command to try.
hf mfu dump
You would then open a separate terminal and:
xxd hf-mf-ABCEDFIG-dump.bin
This should provide you with the binary output of the card.