Karp Linux Kernel Level Arp Hijacking Spoofing Utility May 2026

Disclaimer: This post is for educational purposes and authorized security testing only. ARP spoofing is illegal without explicit permission from the network owner. Do not run this on networks you do not own or lack written authorization for.

If you find an unexpected module, rmmod karp – but a real attacker will hide it via rootkit techniques. kArp demonstrates a simple truth: moving attacks from user space to kernel space increases reliability and evades kill‑‑9 . Red teams can use this to persist on compromised routers or jump hosts. Defenders must move beyond process monitoring to kernel integrity checks (e.g., tripwire for modules, IMA, or eBPF-based LSM hooks). kArp Linux Kernel Level ARP Hijacking Spoofing Utility

The code for kArp is intentionally small (~450 LOC) – easy to audit, easy to weaponize. I’ll release it on GitHub under an educational license in the coming weeks. ARP spoofing is a 40-year-old attack, but it refuses to die. Until IPv6 with Secure Neighbor Discovery (SEND) is universal, and until every switch runs DAI, kernel-level ARP tricks will remain in every serious attacker’s toolkit. Disclaimer: This post is for educational purposes and

Stay curious, and hack responsibly.

The module creates no /proc or /sys entry – detection requires lsmod | grep karp or brute-force Netfilter hook enumeration. Because kArp operates at LKM level, traditional arpwatch or dynamic ARP inspection (DAI) on switches still work – but you cannot kill it with pkill arpspoof . What Defends Against kArp? | Defense | Effective? | Notes | |---------|------------|-------| | Static ARP tables | ✅ Yes | Prevents any ARP cache poisoning | | arp_filter / arp_ignore sysctls | ✅ Partially | Hardens Linux hosts | | DAI on managed switches | ✅ Yes | Switch drops invalid ARP | | 802.1X + port security | ✅ Yes | Prevents module load on endpoint | | LSM (SELinux) blocking insmod | ✅ Yes | Kernel module loading restricted | Detecting kArp on a Host # List all Netfilter hooks (requires root) cat /proc/net/netfilter/nf_hooks | grep -B2 karp Check for unknown kernel modules lsmod | grep -v "^Module|^usb|^video" If you find an unexpected module, rmmod karp