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CENG Homework 2: The Attack Lab Solution


    • Introduction

This assignment involves generating a total of four attacks on two programs having different security vulnerabilities.

Outcomes you will gain from this lab include:

    • You will learn different ways that attackers can exploit security vulnerabilities when programs do not safeguard themselves well enough against buffer overflows.

    • Through this, you will get a better understanding of how to write programs that are more secure, as well as some of the features provided by compilers and operating systems to make programs less vulnerable.

    • You will gain a deeper understanding of the stack and parameter-passing mechanisms of x86-64 machine code.

    • You will gain a deeper understanding of how x86-64 instructions are encoded.

    • You will gain more experience with debugging tools such as GDB and OBJDUMP.

Note: In this lab, you will gain firsthand experience with methods used to exploit security weaknesses in operating systems and network servers. Our purpose is to help you learn about the runtime operation of programs and to understand the nature of these security weaknesses so that you can avoid them when you write system code. We do not condone the use of any other form of attack to gain unauthorized access to any system resources.

    • Specifications

As usual, this is an individual project. You will generate attacks for target programs that are custom generated for you.


2.1    Getting Files

You can obtain your files by pointing your Web browser at:



1
http://cakpak2.ceng.metu.edu.tr:15513/

The server will build your files and return them to your browser in a tar file called targetk.tar, where k is the unique number of your target programs. This website can only accessed from inek computers.

Note: It takes a few seconds to build and download your target, so please be patient.

Save the targetk.tar file in a (protected) Linux directory in which you plan to do your work. Then give the command: tar -xvf targetk.tar. This will extract a directory targetk containing the files described below.

You should only download one set of files. If for some reason you download multiple targets, choose one target to work on and delete the rest.

The files in targetk include:

README.txt: A file describing the contents of the directory

ctarget: An executable program vulnerable to code-injection attacks

rtarget: An executable program vulnerable to return-oriented-programming attacks

cookie.txt: An 8-digit hex code that you will use as a unique identifier in your attacks.

farm.c: The source code of your target’s “gadget farm,” which you will use in generating return-oriented program-ming attacks.

hex2raw: A utility to generate attack strings.

In the following instructions, we will assume that you have copied the files to a protected local directory, and that you are executing the programs in that local directory.

2.2    Important Points

Here is a summary of some important rules regarding valid solutions for this lab. These points will not make much sense when you read this document for the first time. They are presented here as a central reference of rules once you get started.

    • You must do the assignment on a machine that is similar to the one that generated your targets.

    • Your solutions may not use attacks to circumvent the validation code in the programs. Specifically, any address you incorporate into an attack string for use by a ret instruction should be to one of the following destinations:

– The addresses for functions touch1, touch2, or touch3. For touch1 you are allowed to select an address inside the function.

– The address of your injected code

– The address of one of your gadgets from the gadget farm.

    • You may only construct gadgets from file rtarget with addresses ranging between those for functions start_farm and end_farm.








2
    • Target Programs

Both CTARGET and RTARGET read strings from standard input. They do so with the function getbuf defined below:

1  unsigned getbuf()

    • {

    • char buf[BUFFER_SIZE];

    • Gets(buf);

5return 1;

    • }

The function Gets is similar to the standard library function gets—it reads a string from standard input (terminated by end-of-file) and stores it (along with a null terminator) at the specified destination. In this code, you can see that the destination is an array buf, declared as having BUFFER_SIZE bytes. At the time your targets were generated, BUFFER_SIZE was a compile-time constant specific to your version of the programs.

Functions Gets() and gets() have no way to determine whether their destination buffers are large enough to store the string they read. They simply copy sequences of bytes, possibly overrunning the bounds of the storage allocated at the destinations.

If the string typed by the user and read by getbuf is sufficiently short, it is clear that getbuf will return 1, as shown by the following execution examples:

unix> ./ctarget

Cookie: 0x1a7dd803

Type string: Keep it short!

[enter CTRL+D after newline, it will terminate here] No exploit. Getbuf returned 0x1 Normal return


Typically an error occurs if you type a long string:

unix> ./ctarget

Cookie: 0x1a7dd803

Type string: This is not a very interesting string, but it has the property ...

[enter CTRL+D after newline, it will terminate here] Ouch!: You caused a segmentation fault! Better luck next time


(Note that the value of the cookie shown will differ from yours.) Program RTARGET will have the same behavior. As the error message indicates, overrunning the buffer typically causes the program state to be corrupted, leading to a memory access error. Your task is to be more clever with the strings you feed CTARGET and RTARGET so that they do more interesting things. These are called exploit strings.

Both CTARGET and RTARGET take several different command line arguments:

-h: Print list of possible command line arguments

-q: Don’t send results to the grading server. Offline working option.

-i FILE: Supply input from a file, rather than from standard input

3
You can use -q option for offline checking of your result. You can also use this command in gdb when running your

code. To run your code offline, you can give the -q parameter with run command in gdb. You can similarly run your

code with -i parameter in gdb.

Example:

    • gdb ./ctarget (gdb) r -q

(gdb) r -i ctarget.l1.raw

(gdb) r -q -i ctarget.l1.raw

Your exploit strings will typically contain byte values that do not correspond to the ASCII values for printing charac-ters. The program HEX2RAW will enable you to generate these raw strings. See Appendix A for more information on how to use HEX2RAW.

Important points:

    • The Gets function will only stop when it encounters an EOF, and since this is not a character that has an ASCII value, your exploit string cannot be cut short because of any character. However this means what when you are testing your target program by hand, you need to terminate it with an EOF which you can send it using CTRL+D command. Example:


unix> ./ctarget

Cookie: 0x1a7dd803

Type string:    ex

[enter CTRL+D after newline, it will terminate here] No exploit. Getbuf returned 0x1 Normal return


    • HEX2RAW expects two-digit hex values separated by one or more white spaces. So if you want to create a byte with a hex value of 0, you need to write it as 00. To create the word 0xdeadbeef you should pass “ef be ad de” to HEX2RAW (note the reversal required for little-endian byte ordering).

When you have correctly solved one of the levels, your target program will automatically send a notification to the grading server. For example:

unix> ./hex2raw < ctarget.l2.txt | ./ctarget Cookie: 0x1a7dd803

Type string:Touch2!: You called touch2(0x1a7dd803, 0x69f7600)

Valid solution for level 2 with target ctarget

PASSED: Sent exploit string to server to be validated.

NICE JOB!

The server will test your exploit string to make sure it really works, and it will update the Attacklab scoreboard page indicating that your userid (listed by your target number for anonymity) has completed this phase.







4

Phase
Program
Level
Method
Function
Points
1
CTARGET
1
CI
touch1
10
2
CTARGET
2
CI
touch2
25
3
CTARGET
3
CI
touch3
25






4
RTARGET
2
ROP
touch2
35
CI:
Code injection



ROP:
Return-oriented programming




Figure 1: Summary of attack lab phases


Important Note: Unfortunately there is a problem with ctarget that results in a segmentation fault after ”Valid solution for level X with target ctarget“ text. If you see your grade in the scoreboard, then your solution is valid. You can ignore the error message. For example:

unix> ./hex2raw < ctarget.l2.txt | ./ctarget Cookie: 0x1a7dd803

Type string:Touch2!: You called touch2(0x1a7dd803, 0x69f7600)

Valid solution for level 2 with target ctarget

Segmentation Fault

FAILED!

You can view the scoreboard by pointing your Web browser at

http://cakpak2.ceng.metu.edu.tr:15513/scoreboard

Unlike the Bomb Lab, there is no penalty for making mistakes in this lab. Feel free to fire away at CTARGET and RTARGET with any strings you like. You can also find your solutions in your own linux machines with offline mode and use inek machines to send your final solutions after. You need to achieve 50 points in this homework for your grade to be counted and to be able to enter the quiz at the end.

Figure 1 summarizes the four phases of the lab. As can be seen, the first three involve code-injection (CI) attacks on CTARGET, while the last one involve return-oriented-programming (ROP) attack on RTARGET.


    • Part I: Code Injection Attacks

For the first three phases, your exploit strings will attack CTARGET. This program is set up in a way that the stack posi-tions will be consistent from one run to the next and so that data on the stack can be treated as executable code. These features make the program vulnerable to attacks where the exploit strings contain the byte encodings of executable code.










5
4.1    Level 1

For Phase 1, you will not inject new code. Instead, your exploit string will redirect the program to execute an existing procedure.

Function getbuf is called within CTARGET by a function test having the following C code:

1  void test()

    • {

    • int val;

    • val = getbuf();

    • printf("No exploit.  Getbuf returned 0x%x\n", val);

    • }

When getbuf executes its return statement (line 5 of getbuf), the program ordinarily resumes execution within function test (at line 5 of this function). We want to change this behavior. Within the file ctarget, there is code for a function touch1 having the following C representation:

1  void touch1()

    • {

    • srand(10);

    • if ( rand()%25 == 20) { //This will always return 20.

    • printf("Misfire: You called touch1() but you must not execute this part.\n");

    • fail(1);

7

    • }

    • else { //This part will never be executed if touch1 is called directly.
10vlevel = 1; /* Part of validation protocol */
11printf("Touch1!: You called touch1()\n");

    12 validate(1);

    13 }

    14 exit(0);

    15 }





















6
Your task is to get CTARGET to execute the code for touch1 when getbuf executes its return statement, rather than returning to test. However you should make sure the if path that results in function call validate(1) is executed. Please note that touch1 function will always execute in a way that will fail if not redirected. Note that your exploit string may also corrupt parts of the stack not directly related to this stage, but this will not cause a problem, since touch1 causes the program to exit directly.























































7
Some Advice:

    • All the information you need to devise your exploit string for this level can be determined by examining a disassembled version of CTARGET. Use objdump -d to get this dissembled version.

    • The idea is to position a byte representation of the address where correct vlevel=1 instruction is executed so that the ret instruction at the end of the code for getbuf will transfer control to it.

    • Be careful about byte ordering.

    • You might want to use GDB to step the program through the last few instructions of getbuf to make sure it is doing the right thing.

    • The placement of buf within the stack frame for getbuf depends on the value of compile-time constant BUFFER_SIZE, as well the allocation strategy used by GCC. You will need to examine the disassembled code to determine its position.

4.2    Level 2

Phase 2 involves injecting a small amount of code as part of your exploit string.

Within the file ctarget there is code for a function touch2 having the following C representation:

1  void touch2(unsigned val1, unsigned val2)

    • {
    • vlevel = 2;/* Part of validation protocol */
4if (val1 == cookie && val2 == (cookie >> 2) ) {

5printf("Touch2!: You called touch2(0x%.8x, 0x%.8x)\n", val1, val2);

    • validate(2);

7} else {

8printf("Misfire: You called touch2(0x%.8x, 0x%.8x)\n", val1, val2);

    • fail(2);

    10 }

    11 exit(0);

    12 }

Your task is to get CTARGET to execute the code for touch2 rather than returning to test. In this case, however, you must make it appear to touch2 as if you have passed your cookie as its first argument and cookie >> 2 as your second argument.
















8
Some Advice:

    • You will want to position a byte representation of the address of your injected code in such a way that ret instruction at the end of the code for getbuf will transfer control to it.

    • Recall that the first argument to a function is passed in register %rdi and the second argument is passed in register %rsi.

    • Your injected code should set the registers to your cookie and cookie >> 2, then use a ret instruction to transfer control to the first instruction in touch2.

    • Do not attempt to use jmp or call instructions in your exploit code. The encodings of destination addresses for these instructions are difficult to formulate. Use ret instructions for all transfers of control, even when you are not returning from a call.

    • See the discussion in Appendix B on how to use tools to generate the byte-level representations of instruction sequences.

4.3    Level 3

Phase 3 also involves a code injection attack, but it requires you to pass a string as its first argument and unsigned int array of size 8 as its second argument where their pointers should point to their first element (its address).

Within the file ctarget there is code for functions hexmatch, checksums and touch3 having the following C representations:

































9
1  /* Compare string to hex represention of unsigned value */
2  int hexmatch(unsigned val, char *sval)
    • {

    • if ( sval == NULL )

    • return 0;

    • char cbuf[120];
    • /* Make position of check string unpredictable */
8char *s = cbuf + random() % 110;

9sprintf(s, "%.8x", val);

    10 return strncmp(sval, s, 9) == 0;

    11 }

12
13  /* Check if the cookie and its reverse are summed correctly in each element.
    14 The size of the summation array is 8. */
    15 int checksum(unsigned cookie_param, unsigned* cookie_and_reverse_sum) {

16

    17 if ( cookie_and_reverse_sum == NULL )

    18 return 0;

    19 char cbuf[70];
    20 /* Make position of check summation unpredictable */
    21 char *s = cbuf + random() % 60;

    22 sprintf(s, "%.8x", cookie_param);

    23 for ( int i=0 ; i<8 ; i++ ) { // Array size is 8

    24 if ( cookie_and_reverse_sum[i] != s[i] + s[7-i] )

25    return 0;

    26 }

    27 return 1;

    28 }

29
30  void touch3(char *cookie_string, unsigned* cookie_and_reverse_sum)
    31 {
    32 vlevel = 3;/* Part of validation protocol */
    33 if ( hexmatch(cookie, cookie_string) && checksum(cookie, cookie_and_reverse_sum) )

    34 printf("Touch3!: You called touch3 with correct parameters.\n");

    35 validate(3);

    36 } else {

    37 printf( "Misfire: You called touch3 with %s as your first "

38
"argument and %p as your second argument.\n",
39
cookie_string, (void *)cookie_and_reverse_sum);
    40 printf("Contents of your second argument follows below:\n");

    41 fflush(stdout);

    42 for ( int i=0; i<8; i++ ) {

43
printf("%.8x ",
cookie_and_reverse_sum[i]);
44
fflush(stdout);


    45 }

    46 printf("\n");

    47 fail(3);

    48 }

    49 exit(0);

    50 }

10




Stack








Gadget n code
c3

















 






  







  









Gadget 2 code
c3








%rsp

























Gadget 1 code
c3
















Figure 2: Setting up sequence of gadgets for execution. Byte value 0xc3 encodes the ret instruction.


Your task is to get CTARGET to execute the code for touch3 rather than returning to test. You must make it appear to touch3 as if you have passed two arguments. First argument must be the string representation of your cookie. Second argument should be an unsigned array of size 8 where each value at index i is the sum of the ASCII values of your cookie’s i and 7 − i indexes. Basically summation of its cookie’s and its reverse’s ASCII values.
Some Advice:

    • You will either need to include a string representation of your cookie in your exploit string or write an assembly code to put your representation in the stack. The string should consist of the eight hexadecimal digits (ordered from most to least significant) without a leading “0x.”

    • Recall that a string is represented in C as a sequence of bytes followed by a byte with value 0. Type “man ascii” on any Linux machine to see the byte representations of the characters you need.

    • Second argument should have a 8 unsigned int characters consecutively. Please also note that unsigned integers are 4 bytes long.

    • Your injected code should set register %rdi to the address of this cookie string and %rsi to the address of the sum array.

    • When functions hexmatch, checksums and strncmp are called, they push data onto the stack, overwriting portions of memory that held the buffer used by getbuf. As a result, you will need to be careful where you place the string representation of your cookie and the array.


    • Part II: Return-Oriented Programming

Performing code-injection attacks on program RTARGET is much more difficult than it is for CTARGET, because it uses two techniques to thwart such attacks:

    • It uses randomization so that the stack positions differ from one run to another. This makes it impossible to determine where your injected code will be located.

    • It marks the section of memory holding the stack as nonexecutable, so even if you could set the program counter to the start of your injected code, the program would fail with a segmentation fault.



11
Fortunately, clever people have devised strategies for getting useful things done in a program by executing existing code, rather than injecting new code. The most general form of this is referred to as return-oriented programming (ROP) [1, 2]. The strategy with ROP is to identify byte sequences within an existing program that consist of one or more instructions followed by the instruction ret. Such a segment is referred to as a gadget. Figure 2 illustrates how the stack can be set up to execute a sequence of n gadgets. In this figure, the stack contains a sequence of gadget addresses. Each gadget consists of a series of instruction bytes, with the final one being 0xc3, encoding the ret instruction. When the program executes a ret instruction starting with this configuration, it will initiate a chain of gadget executions, with the ret instruction at the end of each gadget causing the program to jump to the beginning of the next.

A gadget can make use of code corresponding to assembly-language statements generated by the compiler, especially ones at the ends of functions. In practice, there may be some useful gadgets of this form, but not enough to implement many important operations. For example, it is highly unlikely that a compiled function would have popq %rdi as its last instruction before ret. Fortunately, with a byte-oriented instruction set, such as x86-64, a gadget can often be found by extracting patterns from other parts of the instruction byte sequence.

For example, one version of rtarget contains code generated for the following C function:

void setval_210(unsigned *p)
{
*p = 3347663060U;
}

The chances of this function being useful for attacking a system seem pretty slim. But, the disassembled machine code for this function shows an interesting byte sequence:

0000000000400f15 <setval_210>:



400f15:
c7
07 d4 48 89
c7
movl
$0xc78948d4,(%rdi)
400f1b:
c3


retq


The byte sequence 48 89 c7 encodes the instruction movq %rax, %rdi. (See Figure 3A for the encodings of useful movq instructions.) This sequence is followed by byte value c3, which encodes the ret instruction. The function starts at address 0x400f15, and the sequence starts on the fourth byte of the function. Thus, this code contains a gadget, having a starting address of 0x400f18, that will copy the 64-bit value in register %rax to register %rdi.

Your code for RTARGET contains a number of functions similar to the setval_210 function shown above in a region we refer to as the gadget farm. Your job will be to identify useful gadgets in the gadget farm and use these to perform attacks similar to those you did in Phases 2.

Important: The gadget farm is demarcated by functions start_farm and end_farm in your copy of rtarget.

Do not attempt to construct gadgets from other portions of the program code.












12
5.1    Level 2

For Phase 4, you will repeat the attack of Phase 2, but do so on program RTARGET using gadgets from your gadget farm. You can construct your solution using gadgets consisting of the following instruction types, and using only the first eight x86-64 registers (%rax–%rdi).

movq : The codes for these are shown in Figure 3A.

popq : The codes for these are shown in Figure 3B.

sarq : The codes for these are shown in Figure 3D.

ret : This instruction is encoded by the single byte 0xc3.

nop : This instruction (pronounced “no op,” which is short for “no operation”) is encoded by the single byte 0x90.

Its only effect is to cause the program counter to be incremented by 1.

Some Advice:

    • All the gadgets you need can be found in the region of the code for rtarget demarcated by the functions start_farm and end_farm.

    • You can do this attack with eight or seven gadgets. Eight gadget solution is cleaner than seven gadget solution.

    • When a gadget uses a popq instruction, it will pop data from the stack. As a result, your exploit string will contain a combination of gadget addresses and data.


    • Handin

As a precaution, you need to submit a single file eXXXXXX.tar.gz to ODTUClass. The file should contain ctarget.l1, ctarget.l2, ctarget.l3 and rtarget.l2 files in textual format. These files should be same files that you feed to the hex2raw program and should be human readable.

Ex: ctarget.l1 First character after dot is the letter l not the number 1.


A    Using HEX2RAW

HEX2RAW takes as input a hex-formatted string. In this format, each byte value is represented by two hex digits. For example, the string “012345” could be entered in hex format as “30 31 32 33 34 35 00.” (Recall that the ASCII code for decimal digit x is 0x3x, and that the end of a string is indicated by a null byte.)

The hex characters you pass to HEX2RAW should be separated by whitespace (blanks or newlines). We recommend separating different parts of your exploit string with newlines while you’re working on it. HEX2RAW supports C-style block comments, so you can mark off sections of your exploit string. For example:

48 c7 c1 f0 11 40 00 /* mov    $0x40011f0,%rcx */

Be sure to leave space around both the starting and ending comment strings (“/*”, “*/”), so that the comments will be properly ignored.

If you generate a hex-formatted exploit string in the file exploit.txt, you can apply the raw string to CTARGET or RTARGET in several different ways:

13



A. Encodings of movq instructions

movq S, D

Source






























Destination D




















S




%rax





%rcx






%rdx







%rbx





%rsp



%rbp


%rsi




%rdi












%rax


48
89

c0

48 89
c1

48
89
c2

48
89

c3

48
89
c4

48
89
c5
48 89
c6

48
89
c7

%rcx


48
89
c8

48 89
c9

48
89
ca

48
89

cb

48 89 cc

48 89
cd

48 89 ce

48
89
cf

%rdx


48
89

d0

48 89
d1

48
89
d2

48
89

d3

48
89
d4

48
89
d5
48 89
d6

48
89
d7

%rbx


48
89
d8

48 89
d9

48
89
da

48
89

db

48 89 dc

48 89
dd

48 89 de

48
89
df

%rsp


48
89

e0

48 89
e1

48
89
e2

48
89

e3

48
89
e4

48
89
e5
48 89
e6

48
89
e7

%rbp


48
89
e8

48 89
e9

48
89
ea

48
89

eb

48 89 ec

48 89
ed

48 89 ee

48
89
ef

%rsi


48
89

f0

48 89
f1

48
89
f2

48
89

f3

48
89
f4

48
89
f5
48 89
f6

48
89
f7

%rdi


48
89
f8

48 89
f9

48
89
fa

48
89

fb

48 89 fc

48 89
fd

48 89 fe

48
89
ff






















































B. Encodings of popq instructions




































































































Operation

















Register R






































%rax
%rcx
%rdx



%rbx

%rsp

%rbp

%rsi

%rdi





































































popq R

58



59

5a




5b

5c



5d


5e



5f





























































C. Encodings of movl instructions












































movl S, D





































































































Source




















Destination D





























S


%eax

%ecx


%edx



%ebx


%esp



%ebp

%esi

%edi





















































%eax

89
c0

89
c1

89
c2

89

c3

89 c4

89
c5
89
c6

89
c7












%ecx

89 c8

89
c9

89
ca

89

cb

89 cc

89
cd
89
ce

89 cf












%edx

89
d0

89
d1

89
d2

89

d3

89 d4

89
d5
89
d6

89
d7












%ebx

89 d8

89
d9

89
da

89

db

89 dc

89
dd
89
de

89 df












%esp

89
e0

89
e1

89
e2

89

e3

89 e4

89
e5
89
e6

89
e7












%ebp

89 e8

89
e9

89
ea

89

eb

89 ec

89
ed
89
ee

89 ef












%esi

89
f0

89
f1

89
f2

89

f3

89 f4

89
f5
89
f6

89
f7












%edi

89 f8

89
f9

89
fa

89

fb

89 fc

89
fd
89
fe

89 ff























































D. Encodings of sarq instructions































































































Operation































Register R


























%rax




%rcx




%rdx





%rbx



%rsp




%rbp



%rsi


%rdi






















sarq R


48 d1 f8


48 d1 f9

48 d1 fa


48 d1 fb



48 d1 fc

48 d1 fd
48 d1 fe


48 d1 ff










Figure 3: Byte encodings of instructions. All values are shown in hexadecimal.






14
    1. You can set up a series of pipes to pass the string through HEX2RAW. unix> cat exploit.txt | ./hex2raw | ./ctarget

    2. You can store the raw string in a file and use I/O redirection:

unix> ./hex2raw < exploit.txt > exploit-raw.txt unix> ./ctarget < exploit-raw.txt

This approach can also be used when running from within GDB:

unix> gdb ctarget

(gdb) run < exploit-raw.txt

3. You can store the raw string in a file and provide the file name as a command-line argument:

unix> ./hex2raw < exploit.txt > exploit-raw.txt unix> ./ctarget -i exploit-raw.txt

This approach also can be used when running from within GDB.


    • Generating Byte Codes

Using GCC as an assembler and OBJDUMP as a disassembler makes it convenient to generate the byte codes for instruction sequences. For example, suppose you write a file example.s containing the following assembly code:

# Example of hand-generated assembly
code
pushq
$0xabcdef
#
Push value onto stack
addq
$17,%rax
#
Add 17 to %rax
movl
%eax,%edx
#
Copy lower 32 bits to %edx



The code can contain a mixture of instructions and data. Anything to the right of a ‘#’ character is a comment.

You can now assemble and disassemble this file:

unix> gcc -c example.s

unix> objdump -d example.o > example.d

The generated file example.d contains the following:


example.o:    file format elf64-x86-64


Disassembly
of section .text:

0000000000000000 <.text>:


0: 68
ef
cd ab 00
pushq
$0xabcdef
5:
48
83
c0 11
add
$0x11,%rax
9:
89
c2

mov
%eax,%edx


15
The lines at the bottom show the machine code generated from the assembly language instructions. Each line has a hexadecimal number on the left indicating the instruction’s starting address (starting with 0), while the hex digits after the ‘:’ character indicate the byte codes for the instruction. Thus, we can see that the instruction push $0xABCDEF has hex-formatted byte code 68 ef cd ab 00.

From this file, you can get the byte sequence for the code:

68 ef cd ab 00 48 83 c0 11 89 c2


This string can then be passed through HEX2RAW to generate an input string for the target programs.. Alternatively, you can edit example.d to omit extraneous values and to contain C-style comments for readability, yielding:

68
ef cd
ab
00
/* pushq
$0xabcdef
*/
48
83
c0
11

/* add
$0x11,%rax
*/
89
c2



/* mov
%eax,%edx
*/

This is also a valid input you can pass through HEX2RAW before sending to one of the target programs.


References

    [1] R. Roemer, E. Buchanan, H. Shacham, and S. Savage. Return-oriented programming: Systems, languages, and applications. ACM Transactions on Information System Security, 15(1):2:1–2:34, March 2012.

    [2] E. J. Schwartz, T. Avgerinos, and D. Brumley. Q: Exploit hardening made easy. In USENIX Security Symposium, 2011.




























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