Awesome
physmem
<!-- Brandon Azad -->physmem is a physical memory inspection tool and local privilege escalation targeting macOS up through 10.12.1. It exploits either CVE-2016-1825 or CVE-2016-7617 depending on the deployment target. These two vulnerabilities are nearly identical, and exploitation can be done exactly the same. They were patched in OS X El Capitan 10.11.5 and macOS Sierra 10.12.2, respectively.
Because these are logic bugs, exploitation is incredibly reliable. I have not yet experienced a panic in the tens of thousands of times I've run a program (correctly) exploiting these vulnerabilities.
CVE-2016-1825
CVE-2016-1825 is an issue in IOHIDevice which allows setting arbitrary IOKit registry properties. In particular, the privileged property IOUserClientClass can be controlled by an unprivileged process. I have not tested platforms before Yosemite, but the vulnerability appears in the source code as early as Mac OS X Leopard.
CVE-2016-7617
CVE-2016-7617 is an almost identical issue in AppleBroadcomBluetoothHostController. This vulnerability appears to have been introduced in OS X El Capitan. It was reported by Ian Beer of Google's Project Zero (issue 974) and Radu Motspan.
Building
Build physmem by specifying your deployment target on the command line:
$ make MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=10.10.5
Running
You can read a word of physical memory using the read command:
$ ./physmem read 0x1000
a69a04f2f59625b3
You can write to physical memory using the write command:
$ ./physmem write 0x1000 0x1122334455667788
$ ./physmem read 0x1000
1122334455667788
You can exec a root shell using the root command:
$ ./physmem root
sh-3.2# whoami
root
License
The physmem code is released into the public domain. As a courtesy I ask that if you reference or use any of this code you attribute it to me.