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Files from Dylan Davis

Email addressdylan.davis at risksense.com
First Active2017-05-17
Last Active2017-06-07
EternalBlue Exploit Analysis And Port To Microsoft Windows 10
Posted Jun 7, 2017
Authored by Sean Dillon, Dylan Davis

On April 14, 2017, the Shadow Brokers Group released the FUZZBUNCH framework, an exploitation toolkit for Microsoft Windows. The toolkit was allegedly written by the Equation Group, a highly sophisticated threat actor suspected of being tied to the United States National Security Agency (NSA). The framework included ETERNALBLUE, a remote kernel exploit originally targeting the Server Message Block (SMB) service on Microsoft Windows XP (Server 2003) and Microsoft Windows 7 (Server 2008 R2). In this paper, the RiskSense Cyber Security Research team analyzes how using wrong-sized CPU registers leads to a seemingly innocuous mathematical miscalculation. This causes a chain reaction domino effect ultimately culminating in code execution, making ETERNALBLUE one of the most complex exploits ever written. They will discuss what was necessary to port the exploit to Microsoft Windows 10, and future mitigations Microsoft has already deployed, which can prevent vulnerabilities of this class from being exploited in the future. The FUZZBUNCH version of the exploit contains an Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR) bypass, and the Microsoft Windows 10 version required an additional Data Execution Prevention (DEP) bypass not needed in the original exploit.

tags | paper, remote, kernel, vulnerability, code execution
systems | windows
SHA-256 | fa13189f37eae3318ce25b3bd600e5e83270e401b53f1a2fd4a6340b7b1a8803
MS17-010 EternalBlue SMB Remote Windows Kernel Pool Corruption
Posted May 17, 2017
Authored by Sean Dillon, Shadow Brokers, Dylan Davis, Equation Group | Site metasploit.com

This Metasploit module is a port of the Equation Group ETERNALBLUE exploit, part of the FuzzBunch toolkit released by Shadow Brokers. There is a buffer overflow memmove operation in Srv!SrvOs2FeaToNt. The size is calculated in Srv!SrvOs2FeaListSizeToNt, with mathematical error where a DWORD is subtracted into a WORD. The kernel pool is groomed so that overflow is well laid-out to overwrite an SMBv1 buffer. Actual RIP hijack is later completed in srvnet!SrvNetWskReceiveComplete. This exploit, like the original may not trigger 100% of the time, and should be run continuously until triggered. It seems like the pool will get hot streaks and need a cool down period before the shells rain in again.

tags | exploit, overflow, shell, kernel
advisories | CVE-2017-0143, CVE-2017-0144, CVE-2017-0145, CVE-2017-0146, CVE-2017-0147, CVE-2017-0148
SHA-256 | fcd672e1db61c5667abd4ad7d59c77b0f8210801d49bddeb68652ed4c77084d2
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