This is the development version of WebGoat 8, if you are looking for a released stable version please go to: https://github.com/WebGoat/WebGoat/wiki/Running-WebGoat
WebGoat is a deliberately insecure web application maintained by OWASP designed to teach web application security lessons.
This program is a demonstration of common server-side application flaws. The exercises are intended to be used by people to learn about application security and penetration testing techniques.
WARNING 1: While running this program your machine will be extremely vulnerable to attack. You should disconnect from the Internet while using this program. WebGoat's default configuration binds to localhost to minimize the exposure.
WARNING 2: This program is for educational purposes only. If you attempt these techniques without authorization, you are very likely to get caught. If you are caught engaging in unauthorized hacking, most companies will fire you. Claiming that you were doing security research will not work as that is the first thing that all hackers claim.
From time to time we publish a new development preview of WebGoat 8 on Docker HUB, you can download this version https://hub.docker.com/r/webgoat/webgoat-8.0/. First install Docker, then open a command shell/window and type:
docker pull webgoat/webgoat-8.0
docker run -p 8080:8080 webgoat/webgoat-8.0
Wait for the Docker container to start, and run docker ps
to verify it's running.
- If you are using
docker-machine
, verify the machine IP usingdocker-machine env
- If you are using
boot2docker
on OSX, verify the IP by runningdocker network inspect bridge
- Otherwise, the host will be bound to localhost
Once you have the IP and port, you'll want to navigate to the /WebGoat
path in the URL. For example:
http://192.168.99.100:8080/WebGoat
Here you'll be able to register a new user and get started.
Please note: this version may not be completely in sync with the develop branch.
- Java 8
- Maven > 3.2.1
- Your favorite IDE
- Git, or Git support in your IDE
Open a command shell/window:
git clone git@github.com:WebGoat/WebGoat.git
Now let's start by compiling the project.
cd WebGoat
git checkout develop
mvn clean install
Now we are ready to run the project. WebGoat 8.x is using Spring-Boot.
mvn -pl webgoat-server spring-boot:run
... you should be running webgoat on localhost:8080/WebGoat momentarily
To change IP addresss add the following variable to WebGoat/webgoat-container/src/main/resources/application.properties file
We supply a complete development environment using Vagrant, to run WebGoat with Vagrant you must first have Vagrant and Virtualbox installed.
$ cd WebGoat/webgoat-images/vagrant-users
$ vagrant up
Once the provisioning is complete login to the Virtualbox with username vagrant and password vagrant. The source code will be available in the home directory.
WebGoat now has Docker support for x86 and ARM (raspberry pi).
On x86 you can build a container with the following commands:
cd WebGoat/
mvn install
cd webgoat-server
mvn docker:build
docker tag webgoat/webgoat-8.0 webgoat/webgoat-8.0:8.0
docker login
docker push webgoat/webgoat-8.0
On a Raspberry Pi (it has yet been tested with a Raspberry Pi 3 and the hypriot Docker image) you need to build JFFI for ARM first. This is needed by the docker-maven-plugin (see here):
sudo apt-get install build-essential
git clone https://github.com/jnr/jffi.git
cd jffi
ant jar
cd build/jni
sudo cp libjffi-1.2.so /usr/lib
When you have done this you can build the Docker container using the following commands:
cd WebGoat/
mvn install
cd webgoat-server
mvn docker:build -Drpi=true
docker tag webgoat/webgoat-8.0 webgoat/webgoat-8.0:8.0
docker login
docker push webgoat/webgoat-8.0