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hInjector

hInjector is a customizable framework for injecting hypercall attacks during regular operation of a partially or fully paravirtualized guest virtual machine in a Xen-based environment. The attacks that can be injected using hInjector conform to the following attack models:

(i) execution of a single hypercall with:

◦ regular parameter value(s) (i.e., regular hypercall), or

◦ parameter value(s) specifically crafted for triggering a given vulnerability, which includes values inside and outside valid value domains, or

(ii) execution of a series of regular hypercalls in a given order, including:

◦ repetitive execution of a single hypercall, or

◦ repetitive execution of multiple hypercalls.

We constructed the above attack models based on analyzing publicly disclosed vulnerabilities of Xen’s hypercall handlers.

The current release of hInjector consists of the following components: LKM, Filter, Configuration, and Logs. More information about the architecture of hInjector can be found in the short paper entitled "HInjector: Injecting Hypercall Attacks for Evaluating VMI-based Intrusion Detection Systems", which can be found online. Also accepted by RAID 2015 with "Evaluation of Intrusion Detection Systems in Virtualized Environments Using Attack Injection" (http://se2.informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de/pa/uploads/papers/paper-893.pdf).

-- Lead architect: Aleksandar Milenkoski ([email protected])

-- Development: Christoph Sendner ([email protected])

-- hInjector was tested in the following environment: Xen-4.4.1 (Intel 64 bit), a fully paravirtualized virtual machine running on Linux Debian (Intel 64 bit).

Installation

  1. Download the source code of Xen and extract it. In the following, [path] is the absolute path to the location where the source code of Xen is extracted.

  2. Copy the file hInjector.patch to [path].

  3. Patch Xen using the file hInjector.patch:

$ cd [path]/xen-4.4.1

$ patch -p1 < ../hInjector.patch

  1. Recompile and install Xen on your system. Reboot.

  2. Create a virtual machine, log in, and copy the hInjector folder on the hard disk of the virtual machine.

  3. Access the hInjector folder and type "make".

  4. Make sure that the structure "arch_shared_info" used by the kernel of the virtual machine is identical to the structure "arch_shared_info" used by the Xen kernel. The best way to do this is to open the files where the structures are declared, compare the declarations of "arch_shared_info", and make changes if necessary.

Example:

Location of "arch_shared_info" in the Linux kernel: /usr/src/linux-header-$(uname -r)/arch/x86/include/asm/xen/interface.h

Location of "arch_shared_info" in the Xen kernel: [path]/xen-4.4.1/xen/include/public/arch-x86/xen.h

Usage

Run hInjector from the virtual machine from where hypercall attacks should be injected:

$ python hInjector.py [configuration file]

Example:

$ python hInjector.py example.xml

The used configuration file should be located in the folder "config". This folder contains a few example configuration files (i.e., default.xml, example.xml, and example2.xml) and configuration files that enable the injection of attacks that trigger the vulnerabilities CVE-2012-3495, CVE-2012-5510, and CVE-2012-5513 (i.e., example_cve_2012_3495.xml, example_cve_2012_5510.xml, and example_cve_2012_5513.xml). If no configuration file is specified, the file "default.xml", stored in the "config" folder, is used.

To check whether hInjector has completed its task, issue the command "dmesg". The output of this command should contain records about invoked hypercalls by the hInjector loadable kernel module. Further, run the command "xl dmesg" in the operating system that administers the Xen virtualized environment (i.e., the Dom0). The output of this command should contain records about intercepted hypercalls by the Filter component of hInjector, whose execution had been interrupted.

Note: Some hypercalls take structures as input parameters. The current release of hInjector supports only a few structures and extended support is under development. Please contact Aleksandar Milenkoski ([email protected]) to inquiry on this topic.

Note: The current release of hInjector does not verify the syntax of configuration files and will not successfully inject hypercall attacks in case an erroneous configuration file is used. If you create your own configuration files, please use the files stored in the folder "config" as basis.

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