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Windows APT Warfare

You're reading from  Windows APT Warfare

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804618110
Pages 258 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Sheng-Hao Ma Sheng-Hao Ma
Profile icon Sheng-Hao Ma

Table of Contents (17) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1 – Modern Windows Compiler
2. Chapter 1: From Source to Binaries – The Journey of a C Program 3. Chapter 2: Process Memory – File Mapping, PE Parser, tinyLinker, and Hollowing 4. Chapter 3: Dynamic API Calling – Thread, Process, and Environment Information 5. Part 2 – Windows Process Internals
6. Chapter 4: Shellcode Technique – Exported Function Parsing 7. Chapter 5: Application Loader Design 8. Chapter 6: PE Module Relocation 9. Part 3 – Abuse System Design and Red Team Tips
10. Chapter 7: PE to Shellcode – Transforming PE Files into Shellcode 11. Chapter 8: Software Packer Design 12. Chapter 9: Digital Signature – Authenticode Verification 13. Chapter 10: Reversing User Account Control and Bypassing Tricks 14. Index 15. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix – NTFS, Paths, and Symbols

Summary

Writing shellcode by hand is too costly for complex attack action. Modern attackers prefer to develop their malware in C/C++ and convert the EXE files to shellcode for use. There are two main reasons for this: one is that handwritten shellcode is costly and time-consuming and it is difficult to develop complex backdoor designs, elevated privileges, or lateral movement features; the second is that shellcode is often used as code to hijack the execution in only a first-stage exploit.

In practice, due to both buffer overflow and heap exploits, there is often not enough space under the attacker’s control to store the whole shellcode, so it is usually split into two pieces of shellcode: the small shellcode (called the stub) is responsible for the first stage of the exploit; when successful, the larger shellcode is loaded into memory for execution, whether by network connection, file reading, or egg-hunting techniques.

In this chapter, we introduced the principle and...

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