Since the code that wrote at here is not working for getting the RSA Private key from the Heartbleed vulnerable server, I modified another python script at here. This script is developed by mothran. The script use his version tlslite library to write his code.
I modified his code but I have no time to test the most important feature, capture the RSA Private key. If anyone who have time to test the code that I modified for that purpose, please let me know the result. I can be reached at here.
The limitation of the script is not the power of the attacker's machine but the victim's server. If you use threading feature, the limitation for the threading may be up to 40. Meanwhile, the screen output of the script will be in a mess. However, I set a private key found flag detection in the script.
Be keep in mind that this script may have bug as it is a Proof-of-Concept code. You are reminded that this code may vulnerable to Lucky-Thirteen.
Furthermore, this code may not trigger the IDS/IPS or iptables rules that is target for the first released exploit code. Hereby, I attached the version
If the code is quit unexpectedly for the first try, it is either the victim is not enabled SSL or the victim is not vulnerable. Meanwhile, it is very interesting to know that when the victim server is under the attack, the loading of the server is very low and there is no entry in the access log of the server. Wonderful, right?
REMARK :
May be I am not so lucky to capture the private key from my lab (Apache with OpenSSL). I cannot capture the private key even running the script for days against my lab virtual machine. Does the private key remains in the memory only in some situation? Or, I am not so lucky? Please let me know the reason, thanks.
UPDATE :
According to the first winner of Cloudflare Challenge, Fedor Indutny that we need some luck to get the private key even you know how to get it.
To install Node.js, please follow this link.
UPDATE 2 :
I even cannot get the private key from Nginx with OpenSSL by Fedor Indutny's code. I wonder if it is because of the Nginx and OpenSSL setting or not. I following this link to set up the Nginx Server.
Recently find the Cloudflare SSL setting on Nginx server at here. I think it is the matter. Meanwhile, according to this article, Ubuntu 13.10 was used in Cloudflare Challenge.
Found a needle in the haystack!
Version : 0.8
REFERENCE
How I obtained the private key for www.cloudflarechallenge.com - Python
Extracting server private key using Heartbleed OpenSSL vulnerability - Node.js
OpenSSL Heartbleed (CVE-2014-0160) vulnerability scanner, data miner and RSA key-restore tools - Python3
That's all! See you.