Skip to main content

Target-centric program analysis.

Project description

archr

Code style: black

Traditionally, binary analysis has been implicitly program-centric, meaning that the atomic unit of concern is the binary being analyzed. This assumption is usually implicit: angr.Project is instantiated with the binary in question, afl launches the binary itself, generally hyper-modified to make it easier to fuzz, and so on.

However, outside of the CGC, programs do not exist in a vacuum. Specific library versions, values in configuration files, environment variables, and a myriad other factors combine with the program binary itself to make a unique holistic target, and in many cases, it is that target that needs to be analyzed, not just the program itself. This is specifically true for analysis that need extreme accuracy, such as automatic exploit generation.

archr is an implementation of such a target-centric analysis paradigm. It consists of two main concepts: Targets, which describe the specification of the target itself, how it is configured, how it will be launched, and how it would be interacted with, and Analyzers, which specialize targets for specific analysis actions, such as tracing, symbolic execution, and so on. To accomplish their tasks, Analyzers might inject Implants (i.e., qemu-user, gdbserver, and so on) into the target.

We have the following Targets:

  • DockerImageTarget, which takes a description of the target in the form of a docker image
  • LocalTarget, which just describes running the target in the local system

The following Analyzers exist:

  • DataScoutAnalyzer (will grabs the memory map, environment, and auxv of the process, exactly as it is at launch)
  • AngrProjectAnalyzer (can create an angr project with the right libs at the right offsets)
  • AngrStateAnalyzer (can create a angr states with the right env, args, and fs)
  • QEMUTraceAnalyzer (does qemu tracing of the target)
  • GDBServerAnalyzer (launches the target in a gdbserver)
  • STraceAnalyzer (straces a target)
  • CoreAnalyzer (launches the target and retrieves a core)
  • InputFDAnalyzer (determines the FD number for user input (in some cases))

Using archr

To use archr, one must first create a Target. First, build a docker image that launches your target. Here is an example dockerfile for a docker-cat image:

from ubuntu:latest
entrypoint ["/bin/cat"]

Then, load it as a target:

import archr
t = archr.targets.DockerImageTarget('docker-cat').build()

And viola!, your target is ready to use. archr will automatically figure out how your binary runs inside your target, and then you can launch and interact with it:

t.start()
assert t.run_command(stdin=subprocess.DEVNULL).wait() == 0
t.stop()

archr makes heavy use of with contexts, which will help clean up resources. Embrace them. For example, you can:

with t.start():
	with t.run_context() as p:
		print(p,"is a subprocess.Popen object!")
		p.stdin.write("hello")
		assert p.stdout.read(5) == "hello"

There is even a context that will allow you to temporarily replace files on the target!

with t.start():
	with t.replacemenet_context("/etc/passwd", "hahaha"), t.run_context(args_suffix=["/etc/passwd"]) as p:
		assert p.stdout.read() == "hahaha"
	assert t.run_command(args_suffix=["/etc/passwd"]).stdout.read() != "hahaha"

And even one that will temporarily replace the target binary's code with shellcode:

with t.start():
	with t.shellcode_context(asm_code="mov rax, 60; mov rdi, 42; syscall") as p:
		assert p.wait() == 42

You can retrieve files from the target with retrieve_contents, retrieve_paths, and retrieve_glob, inject files with inject_path, inject_contents, and so on, get network endpoints using ipv4_address, udp_ports, and tcp_ports, and some other interesting stuff! You can also make a LocalTarget to just run stuff on your host, and it is almost perfectly interchange with a DockerTarget:

import archr
t = archr.targets.LocalTarget(["/bin/cat"]).build()

To figure out how to run the binary, LocalTarget takes at least an argv list. You can also pass in an env.

Keep in mind that since some of the above examples need write access to files, you will need to use writable files instead of /etc/passwd and /bin/cat.

Caveats

Some caveats at the moment:

  • archr does not handle string-specified (as opposed to array-specified) entrypoint directives in the docker file. This isn't hard; we just haven't gotten around to it (see issue #1).

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

archr-9.2.76.tar.gz (58.7 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

archr-9.2.76-py3-none-manylinux2014_x86_64.whl (67.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file archr-9.2.76.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: archr-9.2.76.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 58.7 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.8.18

File hashes

Hashes for archr-9.2.76.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ae4e6b42b70be0cf0c9c9b2da9b5c43f58f24fa343435635b3a8d5e08d61aabb
MD5 86d432a06a8df7b51c595a2d2e43a0f9
BLAKE2b-256 bdd4c5adba8de5c080937726564e561d6cb7f0374b24bfc7a24d25f2c98b8831

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file archr-9.2.76-py3-none-manylinux2014_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for archr-9.2.76-py3-none-manylinux2014_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 bd6690a9297a645d5c378c9b0dc10df8a57f63aa86d80c3151c5a901ad5355e6
MD5 a21735b1f2e21abb085fd6917da9c0df
BLAKE2b-256 48ec23e56a7aec552fea7dc2f28c1add0f187741a5b3bd2d07667e92c63f4243

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page