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In Linux in order to run a program it must exist as a file, it must be accessible in some way through the file system hierarchy (this is just how execve()
works). This file may reside on disk or in ram (tmpfs, memfd) but you need a filepath. This has made very easy to control what is run on a Linux system, it makes easy to detect threats and attacker's tools or to prevent them from trying to execute anything of theirs at all (e. g. not allowing unprivileged users to place executable files anywhere).
But this technique is here to change all of this. If you can not start the process you want... then you hijack one already existing.
This technique allows you to bypass common protection techniques such as read-only, noexec, file-name whitelisting, hash whitelisting...
The final script depends on the following tools to work, they need to be accessible in the system you are attacking (by default you will find all of them everywhere):
dd
bash | zsh | ash (busybox)
head
tail
cut
grep
od
readlink
wc
tr
base64
If you are able to modify arbitrarily the memory of a process then you can take over it. This can be used to hijack an already existing process and replace it with another program. We can achieve this either by using the ptrace()
syscall (which requires you to have the ability to execute syscalls or to have gdb available on the system) or, more interestingly, writing to /proc/$pid/mem
.
The file /proc/$pid/mem
is a one-to-one mapping of the entire address space of a process (e. g. from 0x0000000000000000
to 0x7ffffffffffff000
in x86-64). This means that reading from or writing to this file at an offset x
is the same as reading from or modifying the contents at the virtual address x
.
Now, we have four basic problems to face:
This problems have solutions that, although they are not perfect, are good:
mem
file of the sell with write permissions... so child processes that use that fd will be able to modify the shell's memory.maps
file or any other from the procfs in order to gain information about the address space of the process.lseek()
over the file. From the shell this cannot be done unless using the infamous dd
.The steps are relatively easy and do not require any kind of expertise to understand them:
execve()
: syscall
file the address to which the process will return after the syscall it is executing.mem
we can modify unwritable pages).read()
by said "shell"code).Check out the tool in https://github.com/arget13/DDexec
There are several alternatives to dd
, one of which, tail
, is currently the default program used to lseek()
through the mem
file (which was the sole purpose for using dd
). Said alternatives are:
tail
hexdump
cmp
xxd
Setting the variable SEEKER
you may change the seeker used, e. g.:
SEEKER=cmp bash ddexec.sh ls -l <<< $(base64 -w0 /bin/ls)
If you find another valid seeker not implemented in the script you may still use it setting the SEEKER_ARGS
variable:
SEEKER=xxd SEEKER_ARGS='-s $offset' zsh ddexec.sh ls -l <<< $(base64 -w0 /bin/ls)
Block this, EDRs.
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