[][src]Crate xgadget

xgadget

Fast, parallel, cross-variant ROP/JOP gadget search for x86 (32-bit), and x64 (64-bit) binaries. Uses official Rust bindings for the zydis disassembler library.

Current state: decent test coverage, but still in beta. Issues/PRs welcome :)

About

To the best of my knowledge, xgadget is the first gadget search tool to have these features:

  • JOP search uses instruction semantics - not hardcoded regex for individual encodings
    • Optionally filter to JOP "dispatcher" gadgets with flag --dispatcher
  • Finds gadgets that work across multiple variants of a binary (e.g. different program or compiler versions)
    • Full-match - Same instruction sequence, same program counter: gadget fully re-usable.
      • E.g. pop rsp; add [rax-0x77], cl; ret ------------------------------------- [ 0xc748d ]
    • Partial-match - Same instruction sequence, different program counter: gadget logic portable.
      • E.g. pop rsp; add [rax-0x77], cl; ret; --- [ 'bin_v1.1': 0xc748d, 'bin_v1.2': 0xc9106 ]
    • This is entirely optional, you're free to run this tool on a single binary.

Other features include:

  • Both library API and CLI tool
  • Supports ELF32, ELF64, PE32, PE32+ [1], and raw files
  • Parallel across available cores [2], whether searching a single binary or multiple variants
  • CI/CD for automated integration test and binary releases (Linux, 64-bit) [3]
  • Statistical benchmark harness for performance tuning [4]
  • 8086/x86/x64 only, uses a speed-optimized disassembly backend [5]

API Usage

Find gadgets:

use xgadget;

let max_gadget_len = 5;
let search_config = xgadget::SearchConfig::DEFAULT;

// Search single binary
let bin_1 = xgadget::Binary::from_path_str("/path/to/bin_v1").unwrap();
let bins = vec![bin_1];
let gadgets = xgadget::find_gadgets(&bins, max_gadget_len, search_config).unwrap();
let stack_pivot_gadgets = xgadget::filter_stack_pivot(&gadgets);

// Search for cross-variant gadgets
let bin_1 = xgadget::Binary::from_path_str("/path/to/bin_v1").unwrap();
let bin_2 = xgadget::Binary::from_path_str("/path/to/bin_v2").unwrap();
let bins = vec![bin_1, bin_2];
let cross_gadgets = xgadget::find_gadgets(&bins, max_gadget_len, search_config).unwrap();
let cross_reg_write_gadgets = xgadget::filter_stack_set_regs(&cross_gadgets);

CLI Usage

Run xgadget --help:

This example is not tested
xgadget v0.2.0

About:   Fast, parallel, cross-variant ROP/JOP gadget search for x86/x64 binaries.
Cores:   8 logical, 8 physical

USAGE:
    xgadget [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] <FILE(S)>...

FLAGS:
    -t, --att              Display gadgets using AT&T syntax [default: Intel syntax]
    -c, --check-sec        Run checksec on the 1+ binaries instead of gadget search
    -d, --dispatcher       Filter to potential JOP 'dispatcher' gadgets [default: all gadgets]
    -e, --extended-fmt     Print in terminal-wide format [default: only used for partial match search]
    -h, --help             Prints help information
    -i, --imm16            Include '{ret, ret far} imm16' (e.g. add to stack ptr) [default: don't include]
    -j, --jop              Search for JOP gadgets only [default: ROP, JOP, and SYSCALL]
    -n, --no-color         Don't color output, useful for UNIX piping [default: color output]
    -m, --partial-match    Include cross-variant partial matches [default: full matches only]
    -w, --reg-write        Filter to 'pop {reg} * 1+, {ret or ctrl-ed jmp/call}' gadgets [default: all gadgets]
    -r, --rop              Search for ROP gadgets only [default: ROP, JOP, and SYSCALL]
    -p, --stack-pivot      Filter to gadgets that write the stack ptr [default: all gadgets]
    -s, --sys              Search for SYSCALL gadgets only [default: ROP, JOP, and SYSCALL]
    -V, --version          Prints version information

OPTIONS:
    -a, --arch <ARCH>            For raw (no header) files: specify arch ('x8086', 'x86', or 'x64') [default: x64]
    -l, --max-len <LEN>          Gadgets up to LEN instrs long. If 0: all gadgets, any length [default: 5]
    -f, --regex-filter <EXPR>    Filter to gadgets matching a regular expression

ARGS:
    <FILE(S)>...    1+ binaries to gadget search. If > 1: gadgets common to all

CLI Build and Install

Build from source and install locally:

sudo apt-get install cmake                  # Ubuntu-specific, adjust for your package manager
cargo install xgadget --features cli-bin    # Build on host (pre-req: https://www.rust-lang.org/tools/install)

CLI Binary Releases for Linux

Commits to this repo's master branch automatically run integration tests and build a dynamically-linked binary for 64-bit Linux. You can download it here and use the CLI immediately, instead of building from source. Static binaries for Linux and Windows may be supported in the future.

Yeah, but can it do 10 OS kernels in 30 seconds?! Repeatable Benchmark Harness

bash ./benches/bench_setup_ubuntu.sh    # Ubuntu-specific, download/build 10 kernel versions
cargo bench                             # Grab a coffee, this'll take a while...
  • bench_setup_ubuntu.sh downloads and builds 10 consecutive Linux kernels (versions 5.0.1 to 5.0.10 - with x86_64_defconfig).
  • cargo bench, among other benchmarks, searches all 10 kernels for common gadgets.

On an i7-9700K (8C/8T, 3.6GHz base, 4.9 GHz max, e.g. an older-gen consumer CPU) machine with gcc version 8.4.0: the average runtime, to process all ten 54MB kernels simultaneously with a max gadget length of 5 instructions and full-match search for all gadget types (ROP, JOP, and syscall gadgets), is only 26 seconds!

Note this is a statistical benchmark that samples from many iterations, and requires a lot of RAM (> 32GB). If you just want to run xgadget on the 10 kernels once, use ./benches/run_on_bench_kernels.sh.

Searching all 10 kernels for both partial and full matches is still in beta, no benchmarks yet (implemented but not yet optimized). Because of the performance hit and the lower utility of partial gadget matches, this search option is disabled by default. It can be enabled with the --partial-match flag for the CLI, or via setting a configuration bit, e.g. search_config |= xgadget::SearchConfig::PART, for the library API. Conversely, removing default options improves performance: searching all 10 kernels for only ROP gadgets (ignoring JOP and syscall gadgets) takes just 17 seconds. xgadget is designed to scale for large binaries while being easily configurable.

Acknowledgements

This project started as an optimized solution to Chapter 8, exercise 3 of "Practical Binary Analysis" by Dennis Andreisse [6], and builds on the design outlined therein.

References

Re-exports

pub use crate::binary::*;
pub use crate::gadget::*;
pub use crate::filters::*;
pub use crate::semantics::*;
pub use crate::str_fmt::*;

Modules

binary
filters
gadget
semantics
str_fmt