advanced buffer overflow technique

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Advanced Buffer Overflow Technique Greg Hoglund

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Advanced Buffer Overflow Technique. Greg Hoglund. Attack Theory. Formalize the Attack Method Re-Use of Attack Code Separate the Deployment from the Payload Payloads can be chosen for desired effect Details and Restraints of both Payload and Deployment code. Exploits. A “BUG” in Software - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Advanced Buffer Overflow Technique

Greg Hoglund

Attack Theory

• Formalize the Attack Method

• Re-Use of Attack Code

• Separate the Deployment from the Payload

• Payloads can be chosen for desired effect

• Details and Restraints of both Payload and Deployment code

Exploits

• A “BUG” in Software

• New bugs reported every day• automated testing tools

– USSR Labs

• “Exploit” is code that takes advantage of a bug in order to cause an effect

What can happen?• Machine Crash

• kernel exception

• VIP process

• Application Crash (most common)• Recoverable Exception• Mobile Code (deadly)• File Access (read or write)• Denial of Service

Exploits can be grouped

• Some bugs are all the same

• Some bugs keep coming back– improper filtering– bounds checking– bad authentication– impersonation

• In other words, need better testing

Entry -vs- Effect

• The attack payload is not the same as the entry point

• Missle -vs- Warhead analogy

• The Delivery Mechanism can be decoupled from the Payload

Exploits come in 2 parts

• Injection Vector (deployment)– the actual entry-point, usually tied explicity

with the bug itself

• Payload (deployed)– usually not tied to bug at all - limited only by

imagination. Some restraints.

Injection Vector

• Target Dependant

• OS Dependant

• Application Version Dependant

• Protocol Dependant

• Encoding Dependant

Payload

• Independent of Injection Vector

• Still Depends on Machine, Processor, etc. • With some exceptions

• Mobile Code, Just like a Virus

• Once established, can spread by any means– trust– scanning for more bugs

Payload

• Denial of Service– use as launching point (arp spoofing)

• Remote Shell (common)– covert channel or ‘netcat’ like

• Worm/Virus – extremely dangerous

• Rootkit (common - stealth)

Injector/Payload Pairs

• One injector works on ‘n qualified hosts’

• Example - IIS Injector works on ~20% of Web Hosts.

• Payload– Remote Shell for control– Shutdown Machine– Shutdown ALL Machines on subnet

Types of Injection

• Content Based– characters inserted into a data stream that result

in the remote process doing something it shouldn’t. Process is still in control.

• Buffer Overflow– poor programming practice subverts

architecture of code execution. Process loses control.

Types of Injection

• Trust Based– Boot virus/ Floppy/ CD (parasite process)– MACRO virus– Email Attachments (Melissa, etc)– Web Browsing (exploit user’s trust, etc)

• click thru

Governments write Injector Code?

• 1995 US Defense Intelligence Agency Report– Cuban Military targets US w/ custom virii

• University of Havana, team of less than 20 computer experts

– Russian KGB• prior to 1991 coup attempt, KGB has virii intended

to shut down US computers in times of war

Mobile code in Global 2000?

• 1995 E&Y report– 67% of companies hit bit virus

• 1996 E&Y report– 63% of companies hit by virus

• 1996 UK Information Security Breaches Survey– 51% of companies hit by virus

How hard can it hit?

• NCSA 1997 report– 33% of all machines infected with virus– average cost of recovery ~$8000 US dollars

• November 1988 Morris Worm– strikes ~6,000 computers (10% of Internet at

time) within hours– spreads via Buffer Overflow in fingerd– spreads via Sendmail exploit

How hard can it hit?

• 1989, “WANK” Worm– Hits NASA Goddard Space Center– spreads to US DOE High Energy Physics

network (HEPNET)– 2 weeks to clean all systems

Buffer Overflow Injection

• Overflow the Stack

• Overflow the Heap

• Goal: Must control the value of the instruction pointer (processor specific)

• Goal: Get the Instruction Pointer to point to a user-controlled buffer.

Challenges• Injector/Payload size restrictions

– tight coding requirements

• Injector and Payload in same buffer– cannot step on each other

• Guessing Address Values– sometimes called ‘offsets’

• NULL characters, BAD characters– use encoding and stack tricks

Stack Injection

• Stack is used for execution housekeeping as well as buffer storage.

• Stack-based buffer must be filled in direction of housekeeping data.

• Must overwrite the housekeeping data

Address Housekeeping

•A•B•C•D

•code

•heap

•IP•DI•SI

•FLAG

•SP

•BP

•stack

•IP

Stack Overflow

00 40 20 08

00 40 20 0C

00 40 20 10

00 40 20 14

00 40 20 18

00 40 20 1C

The Problem with NULL

•STOPS

00 40 20 08

00 40 20 0C

00 40 20 10

00 40 20 14

00 40 20 18

00 40 20 1C

NULL must be PAST housekeeping data

•OK

00 40 20 08

00 40 20 0C

00 40 20 10

00 40 20 14

00 40 20 18

00 40 20 1C

Little and Big Endian

• On Intel x86 (Little Endian), Values are stored ‘backwards’ - least significant byte goes first:

• 00 40 10 FF is stored as:

FF 10 40 00

We store address in housekeeping data

00 40 21 04

00 40 21 00

00 40 20 0C

00 40 20 08

00 40 20 04

00 40 20 00

CD 68 45 7FOriginal Address

0C 20 40 00New Address

Injection is Complete

• We control the instruction pointer

04 21 40 00New Address

Where to put the payload

00 40 21 04

00 40 21 00

00 40 20 0C

00 40 20 08

00 40 20 04

00 40 20 00

04 21 40 00New Address

Confined Payload

• Byte Compression

• Use only preloaded functions– Payload doesn’t need to build jumptables– Useable functions must be loaded

• Use Hardcoded addresses– Payload designed for a specific process with

predictable features

• Data portion of payload needs to be small

Using more stack for payload

•OK

77 40 20 08

77 40 20 0C

77 40 20 10

77 40 20 14

77 40 20 18

77 40 20 1C

0D 45 68 77

NO NULL in Address

Much Larger Payload

When does the address contain a NULL character

• Lowland Address - starts with 00– stack is in lowland on Windows NT

• usually 00 40 XX XX

– limits size of payload

• Highland Address - no zeros in address– stack is in highland under Linux– unlimited payload size

Large payload, Lowland address

• We cannot use a lowland address directly, because it limits our payload

• We can use a CPU register

• We can use stack values that remain undamaged

A register points to the stack

•A•B•C•D

•code

•heap

•IP•DI•SI

•FLAG

•SP

•BP

•stack

•IP

Call thru a Register

• Call eax, call ebx, etc– FF D0 = call eax– FF D3 = call ebx– FF D1 = call ecx– etc, etc

Push a register then return

• Push register– push eax = 50– push ebx = 53– etc

• Then RET– RET = C3

Guessing where to go

• We jump to the wrong address– crashes software– payload doesn’t execute

• Use NOP (no-op) - a single byte instruction– NOP = 90

• Fill buffer with NOP’s– “NOP Sled”

NOP Sled

•End up at payload

Inject the Payload into the HEAP

• When the stack is limited in size

• Store part on the payload on stack, the other on the heap

• Protocol Headers– HTTP headers

• Recent Transactions

• Open Files

Execute code on the heap

•A•B•C•D

•code

•heap

•IP•DI•SI

•FLAG

•SP

•BP

•stack

•IP

Trespassing the HEAP

• Two C++ objects near one another

• Any buffer that can overwrite a pointer– function pointer– string pointer (alter behavior w/o mobile code)

Overwrite the VTABLE

• C++ objects have a virtual function table

•Vtable pointer

•Member variables grow away from vtable pointer (NT)

Overwrite VTABLE

• Must have 2 C++ Objects (on heap)

•Overwrite vtable ptr

Where do I make the VTABLE point?

Your own VTABLE

• The VTABLE has addresses for all virtual functions in the class. This usually includes a destructor - which will be called when the object is destroyed (deallocated from memory)

• Overwrite any function that works

Injection is complete

• Kernel level overflows all over in NT

• Off by one errors causing frame pointer overwrite

• Multi-stage attacks where you must first get the target into a state before attempting overflow

• The effects of URL or MIME encoding

Now for the Payload

• Using Loaded Functions

• Encoding our own data

• Loading new functions & DLL’s

• Making a shell

The Payload

•Real Code

•DATA

•NOP Sled

Getting Bearings

– Call RELOC:– RELOC: pop edi

• EB 00 00 00 00

– edi now has our code address– we can use this as an offset to our data

Reverse Short Call

• NO NULL Bytes– RELOC: jmp RELOC2– Call RELOC:– RELOC2: pop edi

• EB FF FF FF FE

XOR Protection

• Cannot have NULL’s in data portion

•XOR every BYTE

XOR again to decode

•Begin decode

Hardcoded Function Calls

•code

Pros/Cons to hard coding

• PRO: makes code smaller

• CON: what if function isn’t always in same place?– Dynamically loaded DLL’s

• PRO: some DLL’s are *usually* always in the same place– KERNEL32.DLL

Dynamic Function Loading

• Use LoadLibrary() and GetProcAddress()– usually always in same place– hard coding usually works

• Load New DLL’s

• Find any function by ASCII name– handy

Load Function by Name

•Function name stored here

•getprocaddress

Build a jumptable

•getprocaddress

Use Jumptable

HASH Loading (el8)

• Process already has ASCII names of all loaded functions stored in process-header

• We can locate any loaded function by checking the CRC of each loaded ASCII name

• We do not need to store function names in our DATA section - only CRC’s– makes payload smaller!

PE Header

•PE OFFSET

•Optional Header

•ASCII NAME•Address

Check CRC’s

•CRC

Limited Character Set means Limited Instruction Set

• Payload is filtered– MIME– URL

• alphanumeric only (email headers)– short jumps (difficult to maintain) – pop/push– subtract

The Bridge

•Avoids jump instruction

•size must be calculated exactly

Load New DLL

WININET.DLL

• Use DLL functions– InternetOpenURL()– InternetReadFile()

• Does all the hard work

• Makes payload smaller

• Download and Execute any file, anywhere

• File stored anonymously - hard to trace

WS2_32.DLL

• Socket

• bind

• listen

• send

• recv

• accept

Interrupt Calls

• Don’t require addresses

• Small

• Easy to use– Load register with call number– Load register with argument pointer– interrupt (2 bytes long)– CD 2E (interrupt 2E)– CD 80 (interrupt 80)

Remote Command Shell

• Spawn a process– CreateProcessA (kernel32 function)– INT 80 (linux) (execve syscall)

• Pipe the output thru socket– Named pipes (~5 functions) – Connect in or out over any TCP socket

Covert Channel

• If exploited process is root or SYSTEM– TDI or NDIS hook– session over ACK packets or ICMP

• IIS– Patch any point where URL requests are

handled– no kernel required

WORMS

• Payload searches for new hosts to attack

• Trust Exploitation– sniff passwords on wire– SMB sessions to other NT hosts– NT Registry Alteration– NFS/Drive Sharing

• Consider survivability of Payload– what % of hosts are eligible?

Lysine Deficiency

• Worm will die if certain condition is not met

• Existance of File

• Existance of Network Entity

• Floppy in floppy drive (testing lab)

RECAP

• Injection is not the same as payload

• Payloads can perform– Denial of Service– WORM– Remote Shell– Rootkit

RECAP

• Injection has many challenges– NULL characters– Stack size– Highland/Lowland address– Calling thru CPU registers

RECAP

• Filters limit what we can use in a payload

• Limited OP-CODE sets can still be used to build fully functional programs

RECAP

• Our payload is encoded

• We can build jumptables

• We can load new DLL’s and Functions

• We can hard-code addresses or load them dynamically

• We can use Lysine Deficiency to keep Worms from spreading uncontrolled

Thank You

Your mind is your primary weapon

http://www.rootkit.com

[email protected]