Awesome
linux-inject
Tool for injecting a shared object into a Linux process
-
Provides the Linux equivalent of using
CreateRemoteThread()
on Windows to inject a DLL into a running process -
Performs injection using
ptrace()
rather thanLD_PRELOAD
, since the target process is already running at the time of injection -
Supports x86, x86_64, and ARM
-
Does not require the target process to have been built with
-ldl
flag, because it loads the shared object using__libc_dlopen_mode()
from libc rather thandlopen()
from libdl
Caveat about ptrace()
-
On many Linux distributions, the kernel is configured by default to prevent any process from calling
ptrace()
on another process that it did not create (e.g. viafork()
). -
This is a security feature meant to prevent exactly the kind of mischief that this tool causes.
-
You can temporarily disable it until the next reboot using the following command:
echo 0 | sudo tee /proc/sys/kernel/yama/ptrace_scope
Compiling
-
Simply running
make
should automatically select and build for the correct architecture, but if this fails (or you would like to select the target manually), run one of the following make commands:-
arm:
make arm
-
x86:
make x86
-
x86_64:
make x86_64
-
Usage
./inject [-n process-name] [-p pid] [library-to-inject]
Sample
-
In one terminal, start up the sample target app, which simply outputs "sleeping..." each second:
./sample-target
-
In another terminal, inject sample-library.so into the target app:
./inject -n sample-target sample-library.so
-
The output should look something like this:
-
First terminal:
$ ./sample-target sleeping... sleeping... I just got loaded sleeping... sleeping...
-
Second terminal:
$ ./inject -n sample-target sample-library.so targeting process "sample-target" with pid 31490 library "sample-library.so" successfully injected $
-
If the injection fails, make sure your machine is configured to allow processes to
ptrace()
other processes that they did not create. See the "Caveat aboutptrace()
" section above. -
You can verify that the injection was successful by checking
/proc/[pid]/maps
:$ cat /proc/$(pgrep sample-target)/maps [...] 7f37d5cc6000-7f37d5cc7000 r-xp 00000000 ca:01 267321 /home/ubuntu/linux-inject/sample-library.so 7f37d5cc7000-7f37d5ec6000 ---p 00001000 ca:01 267321 /home/ubuntu/linux-inject/sample-library.so 7f37d5ec6000-7f37d5ec7000 r--p 00000000 ca:01 267321 /home/ubuntu/linux-inject/sample-library.so 7f37d5ec7000-7f37d5ec8000 rw-p 00001000 ca:01 267321 /home/ubuntu/linux-inject/sample-library.so [...]
-
You can also attach
gdb
to the target app and runinfo sharedlibrary
to see what shared libraries the process currently has loaded:$ gdb -p $(pgrep sample-target) [...] (gdb) info sharedlibrary From To Syms Read Shared Object Library 0x00007f37d628ded0 0x00007f37d628e9ce Yes /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libdl.so.2 0x00007f37d5ee74a0 0x00007f37d602c583 Yes /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 0x00007f37d6491ae0 0x00007f37d64ac4e0 Yes /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 0x00007f37d5cc6670 0x00007f37d5cc67b9 Yes /home/ubuntu/linux-inject/sample-library.so (gdb)
Compatibility
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The x86 and x86_64 versions work on Ubuntu 14.04.02 x86_64.
-
The x86 and x86_64 versions work on Arch x86_64.
-
The ARM version works on Arch on both armv6 and armv7.
-
None of the versions seem to work on Debian.
__libc_dlopen_mode()
in Debian's libc does not load shared libraries in the same manner as Arch's and Ubuntu's versions do. I tested this on both x86_64 and armv6.
TODOs / Known Issues
-
Better support for targeting multi-thread/multi-process apps
-
I seem to get crashes when trying to inject into larger applications
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Needs further investigation
-
Support both ARM and Thumb mode
-
Currently only supports ARM mode
-
Should just be a matter of checking LSB of PC and acting accordingly
-
Do better checking to verify that the specified shared object has actually been injected into the target process
-
Check
/proc/[pid]/maps
rather than just looking at the return value of__libc_dlopen_mode()
-
Support more distros
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Currently only working on Ubuntu and Arch for certain architectures
-
See "Compatibility" section above
-
Possibly support more architectures?
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64-bit ARM
-
MIPS