Author: van Hauser / THC |
This article describes possible backdoors through different firewall architectures. However, the material can also be applied to other environments to describe how hackers (you?) cover their access to a system.
Hackers often want to retain access to systems they have penetrated even in the face of obstacles such as new firewalls and patched vulnerabilities. To accomplish this the attackers must install a backdoor which a) does it's job and b) is not easily detectable. The kind of backdoor needed depends on the firewall architecture used.
As a gimmick and proof-of-concept, a nice backdoor for any kind of intrusion is included, so have fun.
----[ Firewall Architectures
There are two basic firewall architectures and each has an enhanced version.
Packet Filters:
Stateful Filters:
Proxies / Circuit Level Gateways:
Application Gateways:
Most firewalls that vendors sell on the market are hybrid firwalls,
which means they've got more than just one type implemented; for
example the IBM Firewall is a simple packet filter with socks and a
few proxies. I won't discuss which firewall product is the best,
because this is not a how-to-by-a-firewall paper, but I will say this:
application gateways are by far the most secure firewalls,
although money, speed, special protocols, open network policies,
stupidity, marketing hype and bad management might rule them out.
----[ Getting in
Before we talk about what backdoors are the best for which firewall architecture we should shed a light on how to get through a firewall the first time. Note that getting through a firewall is not a plug-n-play thing for script-kiddies, this has to be carefully planned and done.
The four main possibilities:
Insider:
Vulnerable Services:
Vulnerable External Server:
Hijacking Connections:
Trojans:
----[ Placing the Backdoors
An intelligent hacker will not try to put the backdoors on machines in the firewall segment, because these machines are usually monitored and checked regulary. It's the internal machines which are usually unprotected and without much administration and security checks.
I will now talk about some ideas of backdoors which could be implemented.
Note that programs which will/would run on an stateful filter will of course
work with a normal packet filter too, same for the proxy. Ideas for an
application gateway backdoor will work for any architecture.
Some of them are "active" and others "passive". "Active" backdoors are those
which can be used by a hacker anytime he wishes, a "passive" one triggers
itself by time/event so an attacker has to wait for this to happen.
Packet Filters:
Stateful Filters:
Proxies / Circuit Level Gateways:
Application Gateways:
----[ Backdoor Example: The Reverse WWW Shell
This backdoor should work through any firewall which has got the security
policy to allow users to surf the WWW (World Wide Waste) for information
for the sake and profit of the company.
For a better understanding take a look at the following picture and try
to remember it onwards in the text:
+--------+ +------------+ +-------------+ |internal|--------------------| FIREWALL |--------------|server owned | | host | internal network +------------+ internet |by the hacker| +--------+ +-------------+ SLAVE MASTERWell, a program is run on the internal host, which spawns a child every day at a special time. For the firewall, this child acts like a user, using his netscape client to surf on the internet. In reality, this child executes a local shell and connects to the www server owned by the hacker on the internet via a legitimate looking http request and sends it ready signal. The legitimate looking answer of the www server owned by the hacker are in reality the commands the child will execute on it's machine it the local shell. All traffic will be converted (I'll not call this "encrypted", I'm not Micro$oft) in a Base64 like structure and given as a value for a cgi-string to prevent caching.
Example of a connection: Slave GET /cgi-bin/order?M5mAejTgZdgYOdgIO0BqFfVYTgjFLdgxEdb1He7krj HTTP/1.0 Master replies with g5mAlfbknz
The GET of the internal host (SLAVE) is just the command prompt of the shell, the answer is an encoded "ls" command from the hacker on the external server (MASTER). Some gimmicks:
The SLAVE tries to connect daily at a specified time to the MASTER if wanted; the child is spawned because if the shell hangs for whatever reason you can check & fix the next day; if an administrator sees connects to the hacker's server and connects to it himself he will just see a broken webserver because there's a Token (Password) in the encoded cgi GET request; WWW Proxies (f.e. squid) are supported; program masks it's name in the process listing ...
Best of all: master & slave program are just one 260-lines perl file ... Usage is simple: edit rwwwshell.pl for the correct values, execute "rwwwshell.pl slave" on the SLAVE, and just run "rwwwshell.pl" on the MASTER just before it's time that the slave tries to connect.
Well, why coding it in perl? a) it was very fast to code, b) it's highly portable and c) I like it. If you want to use it on a system which hasn't got perl installed, search for a similar machine with perl install, get the a3 compiler from the perl CPAN archives and compile it to a binary. Transfer this to your target machine and run that one.
The code for this nice and easy tool is appended in the section THE CODE
after my last words. If you've got updates/ideas/critics for it drop me an
email. If you think this text or program is lame, write me at root@localhost.
Check out http://www.thehackerschoice.com for updates.
----[ The Source
Grab it here ...
Now it's an interesting question how to secure a firewall to deny/detect this. It should be clear that you need a tight application gateway firewall with a strict policy. email should be put on a centralized mail server, and DNS resolving only done on the WWW/FTP proxies and access to WWW only prior proxy authentication. However, this is not enough. An attacker can tamper the mailreader to execute the commands extracted from the crypted X-Headers or implement the http authentication into the reverse www-shell (it's simple). Also checking the DNS and WWW logs/caches regulary with good tools can be defeated by switching the external servers every 3-20 calls or use aliases.
A secure solution would be to set up a second network which is connected to the internet, and the real one kept seperated - but tell this the employees ... A good firewall is a big improvement, and also an Intrusion Detection Systems can help. But nothing can stop a dedicated attacker.
----[ Last Words Have fun hacking/securing the systems ... Greets to all guys who like + know me ;-) and especially to those good chummers I've got, you know who you are. Ciao... van Hauser / [THC] - The Hacker's Choice For further interesting discussions you can email me at vh@reptile.rug.ac.be with my public pgp key blow: Type Bits/KeyID Date User ID pub 2048/CDD6A571 1998/04/27 van Hauser / THC----[ THE END-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- Version: 2.6.3i mQENAzVE0A4AAAEIAOzKPhKBDFDyeTvMKQ1xx6781tEdIYgrkrsUEL6VoJ8H8CIU SeXDuCVu3JlMKITD6nPMFJ/DT0iKHgnHUZGdCQEk/b1YHUYOcig1DPGsg3WeTX7L XL1M4DwqDvPz5QUQ+U+VHuNOUzgxfcjhHsjJj2qorVZ/T5x4k3U960CMJ11eOVNC meD/+c6a2FfLZJG0sJ/kIZ9HUkY/dvXDInOJaalQc1mYjkvfcPsSzas4ddiXiDyc QcKX+HAXIdmT7bjq5+JS6yspnBvIZC55tB7ci2axTjwpkdzJBZIkCoBlWsDXNwyq s70Lo3H9dcaNt4ubz5OMVIvJHFMCEtIGS83WpXEABRG0J3ZhbiBIYXVzZXIgLyBU SEMgPHZoQHJlcHRpbGUucnVnLmFjLmJlPokAlQMFEDVE0D7Kb9wCOxiMfQEBvpAD /3UCDgJs1CNg/zpLhRuUBlYsZ1kimb9cbB/ufL1I4lYM5WMyw+YfGN0p02oY4pVn CQN6ca5OsqeXHWfn7LxBT3lXEPCckd+vb9LPPCzuDPS/zYNOkUXgUQdPo69B04dl C9C1YXcZjplYso2q3NYnuc0lu7WVD0qT52snNUDkd19ciQEVAwUQNUTQDhLSBkvN 1qVxAQGRTwgA05OmurXHVByFcvDaBRMhX6pKbTiVKh8HdJa8IdvuqHOcYFZ2L+xZ PAQy2WCqeakvss9Xn9I28/PQZ+6TmqWUmG0qgxe5MwkaXWxszKwRsQ8hH+bcppsZ 2/Q3BxSfPege4PPwFWsajnymsnmhdVvvrt69grzJDm+iMK0WR33+RvtgjUj+i22X lpt5hLHufDatQzukMu4R84M1tbGnUCNF0wICrU4U503yCA4DT/1eMoDXI0BQXmM/ Ygk9bO2Icy+lw1WPodrWmg4TJhdIgxuYlNLIu6TyqDYxjA/c525cBbdqwoE+YvUI o7CN/bJN0bKg1Y/BMTHEK3mpRLLWxVMRYw== =MdzX -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----