# Pickle Rick ![](../../.gitbook/assets/picklerick.gif) This machine was categorised as easy and it was pretty easy. ## Enumeration I started **enumerating the machine using my tool** [**Legion**](https://github.com/carlospolop/legion): ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (79) (2).png>) In as you can see 2 ports are open: 80 (**HTTP**) and 22 (**SSH**) So, I launched legion to enumerate the HTTP service: ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (234).png>) Note that in the image you can see that `robots.txt` contains the string `Wubbalubbadubdub` After some seconds I reviewed what `disearch` has already discovered : ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (235).png>) ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (236).png>) And as you may see in the last image a **login** page was discovered. Checking the source code of the root page, a username is discovered: `R1ckRul3s` ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (237).png>) Therefore, you can login on the login page using the credentials `R1ckRul3s:Wubbalubbadubdub` ## User Using those credentials you will access a portal where you can execute commands: ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (241).png>) Some commands like cat aren't allowed but you can read the first ingredient (flag) using for example grep: ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (242).png>) Then I used: ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (243).png>) To obtain a reverse shell: ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (239).png>) The **second ingredient** can be found in `/home/rick` ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (240).png>) ## Root The user **www-data can execute anything as sudo**: ![](<../../.gitbook/assets/image (238).png>)