Code obfuscating on popular OS
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Code obfuscating on popular OS
I was wondering, can you encrypt, or obfuscate parts of your code, and decrypt it at runtime and run? On non-OS environment, I think it's easier, as you have to write the function in assembly, and hardcode the encrypted binary as an array or something in the OS code, along with the decryptor and caller. Because our code runs on ring-0, we can easily execute stack, just as code(correct me if I'm wrong).
Running it on windows (and linux, probably) is way more trickier due to not just the protections in place, but how the programs actually run. I tried to run without any encryption at first. I kinda made it work in windows, using VirtualAlloc, as stack execution is not possible by default. But it is going haywire. You can't access anything outside the 'function', unless you have a pointer passed into it. And sometimes even if you have, you might just get MEMORY_ACCESS_VIOLATION. I was trying to make some changes to a global array(that is not accessible, so passed a pointer into it) inside this 'array' function. Weirdly it started to get Access violations after modifying 4 bytes. I still don't know why.
Have you guys ever tried to do stuff like this? Execution from stack? On OS or non-OS environment? Can you help me?
(It might not be relevant to this forum, but again this is general Ramblings )
Running it on windows (and linux, probably) is way more trickier due to not just the protections in place, but how the programs actually run. I tried to run without any encryption at first. I kinda made it work in windows, using VirtualAlloc, as stack execution is not possible by default. But it is going haywire. You can't access anything outside the 'function', unless you have a pointer passed into it. And sometimes even if you have, you might just get MEMORY_ACCESS_VIOLATION. I was trying to make some changes to a global array(that is not accessible, so passed a pointer into it) inside this 'array' function. Weirdly it started to get Access violations after modifying 4 bytes. I still don't know why.
Have you guys ever tried to do stuff like this? Execution from stack? On OS or non-OS environment? Can you help me?
(It might not be relevant to this forum, but again this is general Ramblings )
A beginner developer/student. Likes to know stuff. Don't have an OS to put here.
Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
What is the point? I mean, you give the hackers the run-around for a while, but it will only hinder them, not make it impossible for them to understand your code. And it will make your code slower even for all of your legitimate users. So again, what's the point?
Anyway, yes, you can save an encrypted version of your program in the executable file, then at run time decrypt it and execute it. On Linux, you have fexecve(), so you can do the decryption in a temporary file and just run it. On Windows I'm not sure. I think you need to execute an actually reachable file. None of that needs to be in assembler, so I don't know what you mean there. But that is utterly pointless, since you encrypt something, and then put the means of its decryption right beside it. It would be like having a safe with the key lying on top of it, you might as well not have bothered.
Anyway, yes, you can save an encrypted version of your program in the executable file, then at run time decrypt it and execute it. On Linux, you have fexecve(), so you can do the decryption in a temporary file and just run it. On Windows I'm not sure. I think you need to execute an actually reachable file. None of that needs to be in assembler, so I don't know what you mean there. But that is utterly pointless, since you encrypt something, and then put the means of its decryption right beside it. It would be like having a safe with the key lying on top of it, you might as well not have bothered.
The NX bit affects ring-0 code as well. So no, this is not possible.pranavappu007 wrote:Because our code runs on ring-0, we can easily execute stack, just as code(correct me if I'm wrong).
So you have an encrypted function as part of a bigger program? That can only work if you fix up any relocations in that function. Or else if the function is self-contained.pranavappu007 wrote:You can't access anything outside the 'function', unless you have a pointer passed into it.
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Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
To know how to do it, just in case, also how to identify such code, in case we might want to reverse engineer someone else's code.(Legal use ofc)nullplan wrote:What is the point? I mean, you give the hackers the run-around for a while, but it will only hinder them, not make it impossible for them to understand your code. And it will make your code slower even for all of your legitimate users. So again, what's the point?
I didn't mean full blown encryption, more like partly hidden. So that anyone reversing wouldn't notice right away, I think it's useful to prevent cracking of stuff. Anyway I am not a pro coder so my intentions are learning and experience.nullplan wrote:. But that is utterly pointless, since you encrypt something, and then put the means of its decryption right beside it. It would be like having a safe with the key lying on top of it, you might as well not have bothered.
I mean I don't know about paging much, but on segmentation, you can just copy the code into an executable segment and execute it, right?nullplan wrote:The NX bit affects ring-0 code as well. So no, this is not possible.
As I've said above, it's partly hidden(atleast that's the idea). Yeah agree on that. It's haard..nullplan wrote:So you have an encrypted function as part of a bigger program? That can only work if you fix up any relocations in that function. Or else if the function is self-contained.
I was just curious to know what others have to say about this, as I have already found it's a bit higher than my current level. More like about other people experiences of stuff like this. And also opinions like this one.
A beginner developer/student. Likes to know stuff. Don't have an OS to put here.
Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
In my country, it is always legal to reverse engineer a program you posses lawfully (freedom of research), and you cannot contract that right away.pranavappu007 wrote:To know how to do it, just in case, also how to identify such code, in case we might want to reverse engineer someone else's code.(Legal use ofc)
Again, it is nice that you are studying the topic for your own edification, but what is the point even if someone else were to do it? Not the point of studying, but the point of doing something like that.
Yeah, that will give a potential reverse engineer the run-around, but will not actually prevent anything. And if someone finding out how your program works means they cracked something, something has gone terribly wrong with your program already. I can think of few non-adversarial uses of this idea.pranavappu007 wrote: I didn't mean full blown encryption, more like partly hidden. So that anyone reversing wouldn't notice right away, I think it's useful to prevent cracking of stuff.
Yes, you can. You can also copy stuff into a page, then mark it executable and execute it. If the OS is particularly hardened and doesn't let you mark a page that previously was writable as executable, then you can also write the stuff to a file and execute that.pranavappu007 wrote:I mean I don't know about paging much, but on segmentation, you can just copy the code into an executable segment and execute it, right?
Encrypting a single function is much harder than the whole program. So just encrypt the whole program. That way, you can take the entire completely linked executable file as input and do something sensible with it.pranavappu007 wrote:As I've said above, it's partly hidden(atleast that's the idea). Yeah agree on that. It's haard..
The probably best known implementation of this idea would be UPX. That program has an actual use, however, since it compresses the file, rather than encrypting it. It compresses the executable, then adds a little loader program that will decompress the program and execute it. bzip2 also has an implementation of that called bzexe. However, both of these optimize for something people tend not to care a great deal about: Disk space. Even in most resource-constrained settings I have seen, disk space has been way more readily available than RAM. And this approach will use up more RAM. First of all, without the encoding, the program could be faulted into address space, one page at a time, therefore only loading the code you are actually using, but with this encoding scheme, the entire executable will be put into RAM at the start. Second, with a non-encoded program, multiple instances of the program could at least share the code pages, but with the encoded program, the pages cannot be shared. Thus, the whole thing also becomes a waste of memory, in addition to time.
The whole thing, in the end, reminds me of several implementations of DRM, and it is doomed to failure like most of those schemes have.
Carpe diem!
Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
Note that the majority of today's commercial software licenses don't give you right of ownership. They only give you a right to use it in the ways they permit, and they always explicitly deny reverse engineering. There are exceptions, of course.nullplan wrote:In my country, it is always legal to reverse engineer a program you posses lawfully (freedom of research), and you cannot contract that right away.pranavappu007 wrote:To know how to do it, just in case, also how to identify such code, in case we might want to reverse engineer someone else's code.(Legal use ofc)
Kaph — a modular OS intended to be easy and fun to administer and code for.
"May wisdom, fun, and the greater good shine forth in all your work." — Leo Brodie
"May wisdom, fun, and the greater good shine forth in all your work." — Leo Brodie
Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
I would argue if that's even legit. I mean I'm not buying a service with a monthly fee, rather something for a single price. As long as I pay the entire price for something, then ownership must be mine. Retaining the ownership wouldn't be the first illegal move on big corps' part... just because they have an armada of lawyers looking for loopholes in law, doesn't make this morally right (but this is very off-topic)eekee wrote:Note that the majority of today's commercial software licenses don't give you right of ownership. They only give you a right to use it in the ways they permit, and they always explicitly deny reverse engineering. There are exceptions, of course.
This is very true.nullplan wrote:What is the point? I mean, you give the hackers the run-around for a while, but it will only hinder them, not make it impossible for them to understand your code. And it will make your code slower even for all of your legitimate users.
You can obfuscate without encrypting. For example, instead ofpranavappu007 wrote:I was wondering, can you encrypt, or obfuscate parts of your code, and decrypt it at runtime and run? On non-OS environment, I think it's easier, as you have to write the function in assembly, and hardcode the encrypted binary as an array or something in the OS code, along with the decryptor and caller.
Code: Select all
char hello[12] = "Hello World";
Code: Select all
char hello[12];
hello[0]='H'; hello[1]='e'; hello[11]=hello[1]-1; hello[2]=hello[3]=hello[10]='l'; hello[4]=hello[7]='o'; hello[5]=' '; hello[6]='W'; hello[8]=hello[7]+2;
Yes, and it's problematic. It's easier if you put the decrypter in your ELF/PE loader (that way the files are encrypted on disk, but decrypted in memory on load before relocation takes place). Once I had to reverse engineer a virus which used a simple XOR as a cypher on the instructions, but only decrypted a small window around the current IP, so it was a nightmare to debug (it was in the DOS era, long before the NX bit). I've always found Russian coders are very creative about these things. It worth study some of their code (most notably some viruses, they are often polymorphic too).pranavappu007 wrote:Have you guys ever tried to do stuff like this?
Not a good idea, because then you'll have the decrypted file on your disk (or tmpfs). It's better if you put the decrypter in the ELF/PE loader as I've said and only decrypt in memory where other processes can't access it.nullplan wrote:On Linux, you have fexecve(), so you can do the decryption in a temporary file and just run it.
I've used a simpler approach in my boot loader. It can load an SHA-XOR-CBC or AES-256-CBC encrypted initrd. On disk, the entire initrd is a bit-sausage, but when booted it becomes clear data, and the kernel is none the wiser. (FYI I place the kernel inside the initrd, so this encrypts the executable as well).pranavappu007 wrote:I was just curious to know what others have to say about this, as I have already found it's a bit higher than my current level. More like about other people experiences of stuff like this. And also opinions like this one.
Cheers,
bzt
Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
You never at any point buy the software; they don't sell it. You buy a license to use it. This has been going on since the 90s, so if it could be cracked, I think it would be by now. Having said that, I just remembered Microsoft's licenses are less draconian than they were, so it's not all bad news. As for the morality of it, I'll get worked up if I think about it, and my heart can't take me getting worked up any more. Besides, when I get worked up, my perspective seems to get unbalanced. I'm just glad I can believe God's Kingdom will set everything right in the future.bzt wrote:I would argue if that's even legit. I mean I'm not buying a service with a monthly fee, rather something for a single price. As long as I pay the entire price for something, then ownership must be mine. Retaining the ownership wouldn't be the first illegal move on big corps' part... just because they have an armada of lawyers looking for loopholes in law, doesn't make this morally right (but this is very off-topic)eekee wrote:Note that the majority of today's commercial software licenses don't give you right of ownership. They only give you a right to use it in the ways they permit, and they always explicitly deny reverse engineering. There are exceptions, of course.
There are obfuscation tools for Javascript. There may be for C, too. These tools take your cleanly-written code and obfuscate it. You could make your build system invoke them.bzt wrote:one could doThis way the executable would be obfuscated, as there would be no clearly readable "Hello World" bitchunk in the binary. Problematic to use, granted, but might be useful to hardcode passwords or encryption keys into executables.Code: Select all
char hello[12]; hello[0]='H'; hello[1]='e'; hello[11]=hello[1]-1; hello[2]=hello[3]=hello[10]='l'; hello[4]=hello[7]='o'; hello[5]=' '; hello[6]='W'; hello[8]=hello[7]+2;
Incidentally, I once, long ago, looked at the assembly language gcc produced for ARM32. It was a tiny program which assigned a string within a function call. There was no "Hello world" in the output, but rather a series of instructions to build the string at run-time from 32-bit values loaded into registers. I was quite surprised. I've long since lost the code, but it looked something like this:
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foo() {
char *bar;
bar = "Hello World";
printf("%s\n, bar);
}
Kaph — a modular OS intended to be easy and fun to administer and code for.
"May wisdom, fun, and the greater good shine forth in all your work." — Leo Brodie
"May wisdom, fun, and the greater good shine forth in all your work." — Leo Brodie
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Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
Turn on optimizations. Odds are, your compiler will rearrange your obfuscated code into something significantly more readable than you intended.bzt wrote:This way the executable would be obfuscated, as there would be no clearly readable "Hello World" bitchunk in the binary.
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Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
Code: Select all
char hello[12];
hello[0]='H'; hello[1]='e'; hello[11]=hello[1]-1; hello[2]=hello[3]=hello[10]='l'; hello[4]=hello[7]='o'; hello[5]=' '; hello[6]='W'; hello[8]=hello[7]+2;
By obfuscation, I meant code cannot be detected by debuggers and reverse engineering tools like ghidra. Something like binary code, but values offset by a number. At runtime some other function subtracts this number from this sequence, thus making it executable.
A beginner developer/student. Likes to know stuff. Don't have an OS to put here.
Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
There's no way it would rearrange independent char operations into a single string data and make "Hello World" clearly readable, but just in case, use "volatile char[]".Octocontrabass wrote:Turn on optimizations. Odds are, your compiler will rearrange your obfuscated code into something significantly more readable than you intended.
Then I must ask, what do you want to obfuscate? a) the source, b) the resulting binary, c) the instructions in run-time memory, d) the data in run-time memory? Of course you could print the variable, that's the point to de-obfuscate data only in run-time, so string not readable in source, neither in binary, but running code can access it without probs.pranavappu007 wrote:Still you can identify the variable and values writing into it. If you print the starting address and then contents, it would be visible, right?
What you want is just not possible, because in run-time the CPU must understand the instructions clearly without obfuscation no matter what, and a debugger is nothing more than a monitor on what the CPU does. You can make the life of a debugger hard, you could specifically mislead some tools, but it is not possible to avoid reverse engineering in general. For example you could jump in the middle of an instruction, that would scramble a disassembler like objdump, but if you run that code in qemu with "-d in_asm" you'd still see a properly disassembled code.pranavappu007 wrote:By obfuscation, I meant code cannot be detected by debuggers and reverse engineering tools like ghidra.
Cheers,
bzt
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Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
I did not meant to make it impossible to debug. I meant to make the existing code(and maybe data too)obfuscated so a tool analyzing the binary won't identify the function, but the program de-scrambles the function just before executing. Or you can scramble the function addresses and store in an array, only to de scramble it at the function call.bzt wrote:What you want is just not possible, because in run-time the CPU must understand the instructions clearly without obfuscation no matter what, and a debugger is nothing more than a monitor on what the CPU does.
Or if you have multiple threads, you can execute code in one thread that affects the code in other thread, but it's not noticeable right away. A debugger or analysis tool will think it's unreachable code, or it does nothing, but in reality it does.
A beginner developer/student. Likes to know stuff. Don't have an OS to put here.
Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
I think a more interesting topic is if you can install something in a popular OS (like Windows or Linux) that can take over the machine and execute your own code in the kernel. Or spy on the kernel code of the OS.
A very possible way to do this is with an FPGA with a PCIe connector.
A very possible way to do this is with an FPGA with a PCIe connector.
Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
Well, if you use a tmpfs, and delete the file before writing to it (or just open an FD with O_TMPFILE), the file doesn't have (or will never get) a name, so no-one can look at it. Unless you look at the FD. But anyone that can look at the FD can also just read out the process's memory (/proc/<PID>/mem), so it is a lost cause either way.bzt wrote:Not a good idea, because then you'll have the decrypted file on your disk (or tmpfs).
Now for the advanced question: Can you fexecve() an FD that was opened with O_CLOEXEC? And what will /proc/self/exe be then?
As I said, /proc/<PID>/mem exists. Other processes of the same user can always read out the memory. And this approach depends on being able to create writable and executable pages (not necessarily at the same time), which a hardened kernel may deny.bzt wrote:It's better if you put the decrypter in the ELF/PE loader as I've said and only decrypt in memory where other processes can't access it.
You underestimate your compilers. If they can prove the results will always be the same, they will make them always the same. Now, in general memory access is slower than computation, so the compiler will likely convert this into a series of constant assignments, but there is no rule saying it can't be done. In fact, there is no rule saying your snippet can't be implemented with strcpy(hello, "Hello World") even if hello is volatile-qualified.bzt wrote:There's no way it would rearrange independent char operations into a single string data and make "Hello World" clearly readable, but just in case, use "volatile char[]".
Carpe diem!
Re: Code obfuscating on popular OS
Yep, agreed. But you can't access /proc/<PID>/mem from other processes with the same user id, even though the file permissions says so, I've just checked.nullplan wrote:Well, if you use a tmpfs, and delete the file before writing to it (or just open an FD with O_TMPFILE), the file doesn't have (or will never get) a name, so no-one can look at it. Unless you look at the FD. But anyone that can look at the FD can also just read out the process's memory (/proc/<PID>/mem), so it is a lost cause either way.
Code: Select all
$ ps aux | grep mc
bzt 856 0.0 0.1 20652 6748 pts/0 S+ Jan15 0:08 mc
bzt 102411 0.2 0.2 20056 10612 pts/2 S+ 22:30 0:00 mc
$ cat /proc/856/mem
cat: /proc/856/mem: Permission denied
$ cat /proc/102411/mem
cat: /proc/102411/mem: Permission denied
$ ls -la /proc/856/mem
-rw------- 1 bzt bzt 0 Jan 18 22:33 /proc/856/mem
$
Hmm, good question! I'll have to write a small test.nullplan wrote:Now for the advanced question: Can you fexecve() an FD that was opened with O_CLOEXEC? And what will /proc/self/exe be then?
Normally true, but not for the ELF/PE loader. That always must have privilege to write to memory which will later be executed. Simply you cannot load executables into memory otherwise, so it makes sense to put the deobfuscator there.nullplan wrote:And this approach depends on being able to create writable and executable pages (not necessarily at the same time), which a hardened kernel may deny.
No, there's no optimization that would replace several character operations with a string data. I've tried. But to be future proof, you could insert some "asm volatile(:::"memory");" to force barriers to avoid any not-yet-implemented, upcoming optimizations, or you could use inline assembly to construct the data with a bunch of "mov"s. The point is, don't store the data as-is, rather provide a procedural way of constructing it in run-time. You can use whatever procedural method you deem necessary.nullplan wrote:You underestimate your compilers. If they can prove the results will always be the same, they will make them always the same. Now, in general memory access is slower than computation, so the compiler will likely convert this into a series of constant assignments, but there is no rule saying it can't be done. In fact, there is no rule saying your snippet can't be implemented with strcpy(hello, "Hello World") even if hello is volatile-qualified.
Cheers,
bzt