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You're reading from  Learning Linux Binary Analysis

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2016
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781782167105
Edition1st Edition
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Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill
Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill
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Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill

Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill is a computer security researcher and software engineer with a background in reverse engineering, software exploitation, security defense, and forensics technologies. He grew up in the computer hacker subculture, the world of EFnet, BBS systems, and remote buffer overflows on systems with an executable stack. He was introduced to system security, exploitation, and virus writing at a young age. His great passion for computer hacking has evolved into a love for software development and professional security research. Ryan has spoken at various computer security conferences, including DEFCON and RuxCon, and also conducts a 2-day ELF binary hacking workshop. He has an extremely fulfilling career and has worked at great companies such as Pikewerks, Leviathan Security Group, and more recently Backtrace as a software engineer. Ryan has not published any other books, but he is well known for some of his papers published in online journals such as Phrack and VXHeaven. Many of his other publications can be found on his website at http://www.bitlackeys.org.
Read more about Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill

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Infected LKMs – kernel drivers


So far, we have covered various types of kernel rootkit infections in memory, but I think that this chapter begs a section dedicated to explaining how kernel drivers can be infected by attackers, and how to go about detecting these infections.

Method 1 for infecting LKM files – symbol hijacking

LKMs are ELF objects. To be more specific, they are ET_REL files (object files). Since they are effectively just relocatable code, the ways to infect them, such as hijacking functions, are more limited. Fortunately, there are some kernel-specific mechanisms that take place during the load time of the ELF kernel object, the process of relocating functions within the LKM, that makes infecting them quite easy. The entire method and reasons for it working are described in this wonderful phrack paper at http://phrack.org/issues/68/11.html, but the general idea is simple:

  1. Inject or link in the parasite code to the kernel module.

  2. Change the symbol value of init_module() to have...

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Learning Linux Binary Analysis
Published in: Feb 2016Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781782167105

Author (1)

author image
Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill

Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill is a computer security researcher and software engineer with a background in reverse engineering, software exploitation, security defense, and forensics technologies. He grew up in the computer hacker subculture, the world of EFnet, BBS systems, and remote buffer overflows on systems with an executable stack. He was introduced to system security, exploitation, and virus writing at a young age. His great passion for computer hacking has evolved into a love for software development and professional security research. Ryan has spoken at various computer security conferences, including DEFCON and RuxCon, and also conducts a 2-day ELF binary hacking workshop. He has an extremely fulfilling career and has worked at great companies such as Pikewerks, Leviathan Security Group, and more recently Backtrace as a software engineer. Ryan has not published any other books, but he is well known for some of his papers published in online journals such as Phrack and VXHeaven. Many of his other publications can be found on his website at http://www.bitlackeys.org.
Read more about Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill