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FalconEye: Real-time detection software for Windows process injections

FalconEye is a windows endpoint detection software for real-time process injections. It is a kernel-mode driver that aims to catch process injections as they are happening (real-time). Since FalconEye runs in kernel mode, it provides a stronger and reliable defense against process injection techniques that try to evade various user-mode hooks.

You can check our presentation at 2021 Blackhat ASIA Arsenal and slides.

Project Overview

Detection Coverage

The table below shows the implementation status and the detection logic for the various process injection techniques. WPM stands for WriteProcessMemory. To test the detection, one can refer to the references section.

Technique Status Detection POC Used
Atombombing Hook QueueUserAPC and look for GlobalGetAtom family of functions Pinjectra
Instrumentation callback injection Detect if a new thread is created from floating code https://github.com/antonioCoco/Mapping-Injection
Reflective DLL Injection Detect if a new thread is created from floating code and if PE header is being written into victim MInjector
PROPagate Hook SetProp to get the address of the property being written and corelate with the previous WPM calls to get the address of floating code Pinjectra
Process Hollowing Detected using PE header written into target process memory MInjector
CreateRemoteThread with LoadLibrary New thread with start address pointing to LoadLibrary. MInjector version also writes DLL path using WPM which is also detected MInjector, Pinjectra
CreateRemoteThread with MapViewOfFile Detect if a new thread is created from floating code Pinjectra
Suspend-Inject-Resume Detect if a new thread is created from floating code(MInjector). DLL Path being written via WPM (MInjector). Detect if context set on a previously suspended thread (Pinjectra) MInjector, Pinjectra
QueueUserAPC DLL path being written via WPM MInjector
QueueUserAPC with memset (Stackbombing) Hook QueueUserAPC and look for memset Pinjectra
SetWindowLong (Extra window memory injection) Hook SetWindowLong to get the address of the function pointer being written and corelate with the previous WPM calls to get the address of floating code Pinjectra
Unmap + Overwrite Alert if attacker process is unmapping ntdll from the victim Pinjectra
Kernel Ctrl Table Detect if WPM is overwriting KernelCallbackTable field in the PEB of the victim https://github.com/odzhan/injection/blob/master/kct
USERDATA Check if WPM target address is in conhost.exe range. If so check if any relevant function pointers from conhost match previously stored WPM address https://github.com/odzhan/injection/blob/master/conhost
Ctrl-inject Detect if the attacker does WPM in victim's KernelBase.dll range Pinjectra
ALPC Callback Extract victim pid in NtConnectPort calls to ALPC port. For attacker-victim pid tuple check prior WPM calls and apply Floating code detection Pinjectra
WNF Callback WPM followed by UpdateWNFStateData call https://github.com/odzhan/injection/tree/master/wnf
SetWindowsHook Save module paths registered in NtUserSetWindowsHookEx hook. Later when a module matching this path loads in a different process, generate alert MInjector
GhostWriting Detect if context is set (NtSetContextThread is called) on a previously suspended thread Pinjectra
Service Control WPM overwriting Service IDE of a process (service) https://github.com/odzhan/injection/tree/master/svcctrl
Shellcode injection New thread started from floating code. DLL path being written by WPM MInjector
Image Mapping Thread started from floating code. PE header being written by WPM. DLL path being written by WPM MInjector
Thread Reuse Thread started from floating code. DLL path being written by WPM MInjector

Architecture Overview

alt text

  1. The driver is an on-demand load driver
  2. The initialization includes setting up callbacks and syscall hooks via libinfinityhook
  3. The callbacks maintain a map of Pids built from cross process activity such as OpenProcess but it is not limited to OpenProcess
  4. Subsequent callbacks and syscall hooks use this Pid map to reduce the noise in processing. As a part of noise reduction, syscall hooks filter out same process activity.
  5. The detection logic is divided into subcategories namely - stateless (example: Atombombing), stateful (Unmap+Overwrite) and Floating code(Shellcode from multiple techniques)
  6. For stateful detections, syscall hooks record an ActionHistory which is implemented as a circular buffer. e.g. It records all the NtWriteVirtualMemory calls where the caller process is different from the target process.
  7. The detection logic has common anomaly detection functionality such as floating code detection and detection for shellcode triggers in remote processes. Both callbacks and syscall hooks invoke this common functionality for actual detection.

NOTE: Our focus has been detection and not creating a performant detection engine. We’ll continue on these efforts past the BlackHat presentation.

Files

.
├── src 
│   ├── FalconEye ---------------------------# FalconEye user and kernel space
│   └── libinfinityhook ---------------------# Kernel hook implementation
├── 2021BHASIA_FalconEye.pdf
└── README.md

Getting Started

Prerequisites

  1. Windows 10 Build 1903/1909
  2. Microsoft Visual Studio 2019 onwards
  3. Virtualization Software such as VmWare, Hyper-V (Optional)

Installation

Build

  1. Open the solution with Visual Studio 2019
  2. Select x64 as build platform
  3. Build solution. This should generate FalconEye.sys binary under src\kernel\FalconEye\x64\Debug or src\kernel\FalconEye\x64\Release

Test Machine Setup

  1. Install Windows 10 Build 1903/1909 in a VM
  2. Configure VM for testing unsigned driver
  • Using bcdedit, disable integrity checks : BCDEDIT /set nointegritychecks ON
  1. Run DbgView from sysinternals in the VM or start a debugging connection using WinDbg.

Usage

  1. Copy FalconEye.sys to the Test Machine (Windows 10 VM)
  2. Load FalconEye.sys as 'On Demand' load driver using OSR Loader or similar tools
  3. Run injection test tools such as pinjectra, minjector or other samples
  4. Monitor debug logs either via WinDbg or DbgView

References

InfinityHook, 2019

Itzik Kotler and Amit Klein. Process Injection Techniques - Gotta Catch Them All, Blackhat USA Briengs, 2019

Pinjectra, 2019

Mapping-Injection, 2020

Atombombing: Brand new code injection for windows, 2016

Propagate - a new code injection trick, 2017

Windows process injection: Extra window bytes, 2018

Pavel Asinovsky. Diving into zberp's unconventional process injection technique, 2016

Rotem Kerner. Ctrl-inject, 2018

Windows process injection: Consolewindowclass, 2018

Windows process injection: Windows notication facility, 2018

A paradox: Writing to another process without openning it nor actually writing to it, 2007

Windows process injection: Service control handler, 2018

Marcos Oviedo. Memhunter - Automated hunting of memory resident malware at scale. Defcon Demo Labs, 2019

License Terms

FalconEye is licensed to you under Apache 2.0 open source license.

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