CAN of Fingers (c0f) is lovingly based off of the passive network OS detection tool p0f. c0f is designed to analyze CAN bus traffic and fingerprint the Make and Model. This tool is still very experimental and alpha and is currently being used as a proof of concept.
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Signal IDs
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Signal Intervals
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DLC Size
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Padding values
- Author
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Craig Smith ([email protected]) for Open Garages
- Copyright
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Copyright © 2015 Craig Smith
Tested with ruby 2.1.5
Easiest method to install
$ gem install c0f $ c0f –help
To work with the source you should follow the following instructions.
Get dependencies with:
$ bundle
Run the app
$ bundle exec bin/c0f –help
To install the app you should build the gem first
$ gem build c0f.gemspec $ gem install ./c0f-0.0.1
Then it will just work from the command line
$ c0f –help
First you will want to use candump from can-utils (on linux) to record some CAN traffic from a vehicle that is turned completed on (not just in Auxiliary mode). You will want at least 2000 packets…which should only take a few seconds but more won’t hurt anything. Have candump log this to a file. For instance
$ candump -l /tmp/mycan.log -n 5000
now you can run c0f on it to get a fingerprint
$ bundle exec bin/c0f –logfile /tmp/mycan.log
This should output some JSON
“‘json {“Make”: “Unknown”, “Model”: “Unknown”, “Year”: “Unknown”, “Trim”: “Unknown”, “Dynamic”: “true”, “Common”: [ { “ID”: “166” },{ “ID”: “158” },{ “ID”: “161” },{ “ID”: “191” },{ “ID”: “18E” },{ “ID”: “133” },{ “ID”: “136” },{ “ID”: “13A” },{ “ID”: “13F” },{ “ID”: “164” },{ “ID”: “17C” },{ “ID”: “183” },{ “ID”: “143” },{ “ID”: “095” } ], “MainID”: “143”, “MainInterval”: “0.009998683195847732”} “` The fingerprint is calculated by a few things:
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Signal ID
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Signal Intervals
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Dynamic Size DLC
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Padding (if not dynamic)
Parts of the fingerprint that need explaining are:
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Common IDs are Signal IDs that repeat a lot on the bus.
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MainID is the most common signal with the highest interval rate
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MainInterval is that rate
Assuming you know what vehilce you are attached to you can create a file with this JSON data in it and fill in the Make, Model, etc. Then you can add it to a DB like so:
“‘ $ bundle exec bin/c0f –add-fp /tmp/fp –fpdb /tmp/candb Created Tables Loaded 0 fingerprints from DB Successfully inserted fingprint (1) “`
Now if you check the logfile against the database it should correctly identify the vehicle
$ bundle exec bin/c0f –logfile /tmp/mycan.log –fpdb /tmp/candb
“‘json {“Make”: “Honda”, “Model”: “Civic”, “Year”: “2009”, “Trim”: “Hybrid”, “Dynamic”: “true”, “Common”: [ { “ID”: “166” },{ “ID”: “158” },{ “ID”: “161” },{ “ID”: “191” },{ “ID”: “18E” },{ “ID”: “133” },{ “ID”: “136” },{ “ID”: “13A” },{ “ID”: “13F” },{ “ID”: “164” },{ “ID”: “17C” },{ “ID”: “183” },{ “ID”: “143” },{ “ID”: “095” } ], “MainID”: “143”, “MainInterval”: “0.009998683195847732”} “`
You can run some cucumber tests with:
$ rake features
Some unit tests also exist
$ rake test
Currently this repo does not include a fingerprint database .… yet. See Open Garages mailing list.