Reader small image

You're reading from  Learning Linux Binary Analysis

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2016
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781782167105
Edition1st Edition
Languages
Tools
Right arrow
Author (1)
Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill
Ryan "elfmaster" O'Neill
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

Right arrow

K-ecfs – kernel ECFS


In the previous chapter, we discussed the ECFS (short for Extended Core File Snapshot) technology. It is worth mentioning near the end of this chapter that I have worked out some code for a kernel-ecfs, which merges vmlinux and /proc/kcore into a kernel-ecfs file. The result is essentially a file similar to /proc/kcore, but one that also has section headers and symbols. In this way, an analyst can easily access any part of the kernel, LKMs, and kernel memory (such as the "vmalloc'd" memory). This code will eventually become publicly available.

A sneak peek of the kernel-ecfs file

Here, we are demonstrating how /proc/kcore has been snapshotted into a file called kcore.img and given a set of ELF section headers:

# ./kcore_ecfs kcore.img

# readelf -S kcore.img
here are 6 section headers, starting at offset 0x60404afc:

Section Headers:
  [Nr] Name              Type             Address           Offset
       Size              EntSize          Flags  Link  Info  Align
  ...
lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
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