Running a Buffer Overflow Attack - Computerphile

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  • čas přidán 1. 03. 2016
  • Making yourself the all-powerful "Root" super-user on a computer using a buffer overflow attack. Assistant Professor Dr Mike Pound details how it's done.
    Formerly titled "Buffer Overflow Attack" -Aug 2021
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    This video was filmed and edited by Sean Riley.
    Computer Science at the University of Nottingham: bit.ly/nottscomputer
    Computerphile is a sister project to Brady Haran's Numberphile. More at www.bradyharan.com

Komentáře • 1,2K

  • @tristant9686
    @tristant9686 Před 7 lety +2668

    You can see he is very excited to tell this.

    • @minecraft9260
      @minecraft9260 Před 5 lety +68

      Tristan T I'm excited to learn this.

    • @germangamingvideos6069
      @germangamingvideos6069 Před 5 lety +9

      @@minecraft9260 Me too

    • @matze3596
      @matze3596 Před 5 lety +24

      Frist time he can show what i spend his time on...Most people would not listen maybe cause they dont understand or maybe because they believe its something illegal.

    • @buzifalus
      @buzifalus Před 5 lety +7

      Because people are usually not interested or afraid of complex computer stuff

    • @iraianbu3388
      @iraianbu3388 Před 4 lety +1

      May i know what content is on cat shell_code

  • @MaxJNorman
    @MaxJNorman Před 7 lety +3975

    I really like this guy

    • @TheCFJB
      @TheCFJB Před 5 lety +59

      I'd 100% agree.

    • @gregoriysharapov1936
      @gregoriysharapov1936 Před 5 lety +16

      Absolutely, max!

    • @benchiang8235
      @benchiang8235 Před 5 lety +20

      Me too, he's cool.

    • @GodlyOne123
      @GodlyOne123 Před 5 lety +97

      It's refreshing to see positivity and enthusiasm towards typically dry subjects. This whole channel is great, but this guy in particular is probably their most enjoyable to watch.

    • @ashleybishton742
      @ashleybishton742 Před 5 lety +9

      Dude can hack anything I bet lol. He could devastate a system lol

  • @aadeshsalecha4951
    @aadeshsalecha4951 Před 8 lety +2171

    This was by far the best video.....
    Normally Computerphile tries to address a wider audience, but I personally would like to see more of these kind of in-depth videos.

    • @kipchickensout
      @kipchickensout Před 5 lety +10

      exactly

    • @CP-hd5cj
      @CP-hd5cj Před 5 lety +38

      Check out liveoverflow if you like this. He has tons of similar stuff, and decently in-depth

    • @dvorak2676
      @dvorak2676 Před 4 lety +10

      this is an introduction

    • @iraianbu3388
      @iraianbu3388 Před 4 lety +2

      May i know what content is on cat shell_code

    • @cheesescrust5399
      @cheesescrust5399 Před 4 lety +4

      Dvo rak yeah I learned how to do basic stack overflows and run stack overflows back in the XP days, but I never learned in depth, complex attacks. I learned enough to run a debugger, find the memory address, write a nopales, etc but I never got deep enough to learn heap spraying, etc. They can get really complex now to bypass ASLR and other measures. I am trying to revisit this and learn more!

  • @ElagabalusRex
    @ElagabalusRex Před 8 lety +1164

    I would love to see a series on micro-architectures, machine code, and assembly

    • @TheRomichou
      @TheRomichou Před 8 lety +10

      +ElagabalusRex Agreed!

    • @Funderpanda
      @Funderpanda Před 6 lety +6

      and micro-waves!

    • @akam9919
      @akam9919 Před 6 lety +1

      Yes!

    • @kanpitcha54
      @kanpitcha54 Před 6 lety

      please!

    • @AbuDoujana
      @AbuDoujana Před 5 lety +9

      @stephen schneider it may be tricky but it is definitely not 'insanely hard'... U just need to know at least the basics of forward programming ( C programing for example) and you can start from there, i would say i love it more than any other field but everyone has an opinion

  • @edgeeffect
    @edgeeffect Před 8 lety +472

    The sledge/bomb animation is BRILLIANT!

  • @ItsNotJustRice
    @ItsNotJustRice Před 3 lety +140

    I know this particular video was years ago, but this guy is actually fun to watch. I'm terrible at learning, but he makes sense of a lot of things without dragging on the boring part.

    • @Stopinvadingmyhardware
      @Stopinvadingmyhardware Před rokem

      Are you that mad at someone you don’t even know?

    • @Soedmaelk
      @Soedmaelk Před 9 měsíci

      @@Stopinvadingmyhardware You replied to the wrong guy

  • @sickerpuppies
    @sickerpuppies Před 4 lety +623

    "It's meant for ethical hacking, let's just make that clear" - Mike Pound, 2016

    • @ashleybishton742
      @ashleybishton742 Před 4 lety +3

      Only if you know how to use the scripts.

    • @charlieweberlv
      @charlieweberlv Před 2 lety +1

      That’s like trying to say this is an ethical shot from a gun to somebody’s body, it’s a hack.

    • @thegoodkidboy7726
      @thegoodkidboy7726 Před rokem

      @@charlieweberlv People who find exploits and report them are important to the security of many systems. Companies hire penetration testers to try to break into their systems, so these issues can be fixed. Watch the footage of L0pht testifying before the US senate in 1998.

    • @davishall
      @davishall Před rokem +17

      @@charlieweberlv Not at all. To be able to identify bugs, one must be able to think like a malicious hacker and have the same tools as a malicious hacker. Without ethical hacking, there would be a lot more unethical hacking.

    • @slingshot99
      @slingshot99 Před rokem +5

      @@charlieweberlv You have to be able to disassemble something to understand its flaws. That's what ethical hacking essentially does.

  • @sivalley
    @sivalley Před 8 lety +635

    To err is human, but to really foul things up requires the root password.
    -Unknown

  • @ButzPunk
    @ButzPunk Před 8 lety +352

    This was brilliant. More like it, please!

    • @cloveramv
      @cloveramv Před 5 lety +1

      Powerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
      BUHAHAHAHAHAAHAHA
      whoami
      .
      .
      I am root baby.

    • @iraianbu3388
      @iraianbu3388 Před 4 lety

      May i know what content is on cat shell_code

  • @colossalbreacker
    @colossalbreacker Před 4 lety +26

    I'm a cs major, but I don't normally like watching cs related youtube channels. These videos are awesome though, some of them are things I thought I had a decent grasp on and I end up learning something. I also love how happy Dr. Pound seems when he is talking about something, you can tell he really likes what he does.

  • @Elite7555
    @Elite7555 Před 3 lety +33

    Absolutely brilliant demonstration. All universities that I know teach C/C++, but they don't teach the essence of software security, which should be pounded into every student's head right from the beginning.

    • @NightLife094
      @NightLife094 Před rokem +6

      In my university in germany, they taught us these. But i mean the courses are called cybersecurity and reverse engineering

    • @lawrencelim6890
      @lawrencelim6890 Před rokem +1

      @@NightLife094same. The info was taught in an intro to cyber course which made us do a lab that required us to attain root access using buffer overflow just like in the video.

  • @Anvilshock
    @Anvilshock Před 8 lety +160

    Nice presentation, thanks! It would be even nicer to have the stack video segment made clickable, given CZcams's tendency to "Suggest" everything but related videos.

    • @Computerphile
      @Computerphile  Před 8 lety +34

      +Anvilshock I'll sort that! >Sean

    • @Anvilshock
      @Anvilshock Před 8 lety +2

      ***** Much obliged, thanks!

    • @zavvie809
      @zavvie809 Před 8 lety +2

      +Computerphile I suggest heap sort for that.
      :)

    • @MamboBean343
      @MamboBean343 Před 8 lety +3

      +Computerphile Still not really fixed. It's currently neither a card or an annotation.

    • @ChaimS
      @ChaimS Před 8 lety

      +Anvilshock Also, it would be awesome if it was mentioned where in the video he talks about them, since we may not necessarily have 10-15 minutes to watch the whole video.

  • @DFX2KX
    @DFX2KX Před 7 lety +50

    messing with, and forcibly messing with the stack is the source of a few old school console hacks if I recall, particularly on NES games. You write memory by doing very specific things to set certain memory values in an unusual way

    • @hamstsorkxxor
      @hamstsorkxxor Před 7 lety +20

      Pokemon! If I remember correctly, that missingno nonsense in Pokemon Red was a stack overflow.

    • @UmVtCg
      @UmVtCg Před 7 lety +2

      The game genie does this

    • @ns2304
      @ns2304 Před 2 lety

      Think its how PS1 and onwards did it as well. Gameshark and Gamemaster ripped the values off the game corresponding to a particular attribute. Then you tweak the code to get outcome like inf items, inf health etc. Never knew this was the science behind it hah

  • @MrJoao6697
    @MrJoao6697 Před 8 lety +5

    What a video! Great job on explaining this attack, I'll definitely be looking forward to learn more of this as I get into assembler at University!

  • @JaceLansing
    @JaceLansing Před 3 lety +1

    Man! How am I only finding your channel now!? This was great. Thank you for taking the time to put this together.

  • @timm9301
    @timm9301 Před 5 lety

    I have studied exploit dev for a number of years and this is by far one of the best explanations ever! Keep it up!

  • @qgysugfq3935
    @qgysugfq3935 Před rokem +7

    This hits especially hard since I just finished my assembly and computer systems class. Great video!

  • @geonerd
    @geonerd Před 8 lety +81

    Mike has a certain Dr. Evil vibe in that he clearly enjoys writing "Malicious Code." :)

  • @cyberwithtom7714
    @cyberwithtom7714 Před 5 lety +1

    for years ive been reading and trying to work out the ins and outs of bufferoverflow i can honestly say this is one of the most simple and effective videos out there on BO well done and Kudos loved watching it (for the 100th time)

  • @shumakriss
    @shumakriss Před 8 lety

    Thank you! I've never seen this explained in its entirety and there are lots nuances that have always inhibited my own educational endeavors. Knowing GDB, assembler, endianness, no-op sleds, etc were all concepts I understood but could never completely tie together. Excellent video.

  • @gassnake2004
    @gassnake2004 Před 8 lety +23

    Great video! There's a lot of virus "concept" videos that explain how they work, but not many that show the actual implementation and writing of specific attacks. More please!

  • @realeques
    @realeques Před 7 lety +118

    i love how he explains every topic like its the best in the world... i could use him as my personal coach !

  • @jonahansen
    @jonahansen Před 6 lety +2

    Damn! Excellent presentation on how stack overflow exploits work! No hand-waving; a complete demonstration of how it's done, down to aligning the return address and the no-op sled mitigation.

  • @Acid113377
    @Acid113377 Před 7 lety

    probably one of the best computerphile videos yet. Thank you Dr. Pound!

  • @furetosan
    @furetosan Před 8 lety +13

    Awesome video. Especially the bit about the no-op slope.

  • @x1g5dj7dh4
    @x1g5dj7dh4 Před 8 lety +13

    This was amazingly informative, especially for someone not using Linux. Well done!

  • @dantesalighieri
    @dantesalighieri Před 4 měsíci +1

    The way this man explains things is absolutely DIAMOND.

  • @TheMagAirsoft
    @TheMagAirsoft Před 3 lety +1

    Dr Mike Pound, i do not know if you know this but you are saving a lot of network security students with your videos on these subjects. They are incredibly informative and makes a whole subject comprehensible in the matter of minutes. A Great thank you.

  • @lolbajset
    @lolbajset Před 8 lety +29

    I absolutely love videos on things like malware, exploits and similar stuff, feel free to upload more of it if you can :D

  • @eliausi9696
    @eliausi9696 Před 7 lety +7

    Welldone on explaining this so well

  • @Tithis
    @Tithis Před 5 lety

    Studying for a security certificate and was having a hard time understanding exactly what was going on with the way they explained it in their videos. Your video really helped me understand it better, mostly by visualizing how the memory is laid out.

  • @jurepustoslemsek7882
    @jurepustoslemsek7882 Před 5 lety +1

    I watched this a long time ago, but after taking an Assembly class in uni, I suddenly completely understand what he did and why it works! this is an absolutely amazing video as it actually gives an incentive to continue learning low-level programming and such.

  • @__-xl1zi
    @__-xl1zi Před 5 lety +236

    Everyone else:
    *makes a 20 char buffer*
    Mike: "We allocate a buffer that's 500 characters long"

    • @username17234
      @username17234 Před 4 lety +42

      You need the buffer to be big enough to be able to comfortably hold your machine code plus a hefty padding for memory address variations.

    • @dicksonZero
      @dicksonZero Před 4 lety +66

      still wondering how he is going to type all 500 characters until he pulls out his python

    • @cheesescrust5399
      @cheesescrust5399 Před 4 lety +3

      Eduardo I didn’t think it matters. I thought even small buffers could be exploited because the exploit payload just overflows and gets thrown into the stack. As long as you nopsled is hit by the pointer it just keeps running until it hits the return address which jumps to the shell code? Is that not correct?

    • @rampage_sl
      @rampage_sl Před 4 lety +7

      @@dicksonZero I see what you did there

    • @mu11668B
      @mu11668B Před 4 lety

      Well...
      If I'm not writing codes for dev boards that has memory capped at few KBs, I usually allocate a lot more, like 4096 bytes.
      It has hardly any drawback for machines with GBs of RAM and lowers the risks of writing data beyond the buffer zone.

  • @JaisMathews
    @JaisMathews Před 3 lety +10

    It would have been pleasure to sit in his classes. We need more professors like this.

  • @hypernova2906
    @hypernova2906 Před 4 měsíci

    the stack content visualization and the no-op sled animation were really awesome

  • @tommybenshaul3443
    @tommybenshaul3443 Před 6 lety +2

    a very good video, explains beautifully the why stack works and how to exploit a buffer overflow

  • @xSCOOTERx2
    @xSCOOTERx2 Před 8 lety +10

    Had this for a homework assignment. It was quite hard to understand how to manipulate the stack at first, but this video helped a lot.

  • @HavelockBanana
    @HavelockBanana Před 8 lety +6

    yeah! A technical video :-) Nice to see some actual code on this channel (even though it's being explained in a simple way :) )

  • @chris_1337
    @chris_1337 Před 8 lety +1

    This was AWESOME! More, more, more please! Dr Pound is a great teacher

  • @Aemilindore
    @Aemilindore Před 8 lety +1

    I truly love the method Cumputerphine explains things. These are very advanced concepts explained so simply. Hats off for your effort.
    I am a researcher in the field of WSN. But I truly love this type of work. I would love to know what research field are related to this type of work.
    Once again. Great explanation. Love your videos!

  • @hellterminator
    @hellterminator Před 8 lety +449

    And this, kids, is why you should always sanitize your inputs.

    • @michaeltorres1263
      @michaeltorres1263 Před 8 lety

      +hellterminator HAHAHAHAAHA!

    • @SUFHolbek
      @SUFHolbek Před 8 lety +21

      +hellterminator Little Robby Drop Tables

    • @hellterminator
      @hellterminator Před 8 lety +8

      Simon WoodburyForget Interesting language. I'm probably gonna stick with C/C++, but Rust is definitely interesting.

  • @MiSt3300
    @MiSt3300 Před 3 lety +14

    Apart from the attack, it's so interesting to see how the computer actually processes the programme... I mean, I never really thought about it, that all the functions and returns and variables have to be stored somewhere and that it has to know how to execute it... I really like to think of a computer as a human being XD

  • @nikhilnarayanan5949
    @nikhilnarayanan5949 Před 4 lety

    This channel is by far one of the best....I made a computer application similar to chain reaction using the swing framework of java....I got a stackOverFlow error because of infinite recursion....this video really sorted me out....thanks!!!😁😁😊

  • @cup-of-char
    @cup-of-char Před 7 lety

    Greetings! I watched this video to help me understand buffer overflows in my binary exploitation class in university and it was really helpful. Thank you so much!

  • @GenGariczek
    @GenGariczek Před 8 lety +16

    More on similar topics please :)

  • @athanoslee
    @athanoslee Před 7 lety +210

    I like his playful manners and smiles. I think I have a crush.

    • @nofrag25
      @nofrag25 Před 6 lety +21

      He s married bro

    • @firstnamelastname7319
      @firstnamelastname7319 Před 5 lety +81

      I want him to overflow my buffer 😍

    • @jscorpio1987
      @jscorpio1987 Před 4 lety +10

      Thibaud so? Are we supposed to intensively research a person’s personal life now to make sure they’re absolutely 100% single before we’re allowed to have an innocent crush on them? It’s not as if you can control such feelings and it’s not like OP was exactly sending the guy a marriage proposal.

    • @kbs1212
      @kbs1212 Před 4 lety +4

      J T Maybe OP isn’t but I am. Marry me Mr. Pound

    • @untilted9126
      @untilted9126 Před 4 lety

      I do as well

  • @lumin0l161
    @lumin0l161 Před rokem

    Best explanation of a buffer overflow I’ve ever seen.

  • @mad7227
    @mad7227 Před 6 měsíci

    His best yet IMO. Love the level of detail and honesty enthusiasm of the topic 😁

  • @user-eh5wo8re3d
    @user-eh5wo8re3d Před 8 lety +7

    very nice Video. would love to See more of this sort in the future

    • @gegdim9307
      @gegdim9307 Před 8 lety +2

      Fear not my friend! Botnets and iPhone decryption coming soon!

    • @user-eh5wo8re3d
      @user-eh5wo8re3d Před 8 lety

      Well that is a truly marvelous thing to hear. Am looking forward to it!

  • @another-person-on-youtube
    @another-person-on-youtube Před 3 lety +20

    "Can't type while people are watching."
    I'm not the only one!

  • @DirkArnez
    @DirkArnez Před 3 lety

    Very clearly explained... I have been looking for a tutorial like this for about ten years.

  • @CryptoJones
    @CryptoJones Před 5 lety

    Dr. Pound, thank you for the brilliant explanation of this. I wish I had you to explain these things to me as an undergrad.

  • @saultube44
    @saultube44 Před 7 lety +8

    The guy is quite smart and he knows his stuff

  • @tiannimyers1204
    @tiannimyers1204 Před 4 lety +3

    The more I learn about computers, the more I realize how easy they are. Great video.

  • @jorgeleopoldocurberarodrig5315

    I need the second part of this video so much.

  • @__-to3hq
    @__-to3hq Před 5 lety

    I love how much this guy loves talking about all of these topics its awesome :]

  • @VaultRaider
    @VaultRaider Před 8 lety +25

    These types of videos are better than the robots/drones stuff

    • @anujmchitale
      @anujmchitale Před 5 lety

      Not for a person who isn't interested in SW security or programming in general.

  • @34521ful
    @34521ful Před 5 lety +5

    Just a slight error for future viewers, at the 7:10 minute mark, he points from "a" to the start of "buffer". What he meant was that we are at "ebp" to the start of the buffer is what sub $0x1f4, %esp does :)

    • @mustafadurukan6893
      @mustafadurukan6893 Před 4 lety

      So the buffer starts from esp minus 500 and the buffer progresses towards ebp, right?

  • @Zeldon567
    @Zeldon567 Před 2 lety

    As a frequent viewer of videogame speedruns, I know quite a bit about the uses of buffer overflow/underflow. Fun stuff.

  • @thomasip9938
    @thomasip9938 Před 8 lety +1

    Please do more of this!!

  • @Tommus1997
    @Tommus1997 Před 5 lety +46

    "I'm assuming you know what a stack is."
    *defines function*

    • @Juasml
      @Juasml Před 4 lety +19

      When you know a lot about something, sometimes it's hard to tell when you're being overwhelming and when you're going too slow. I guess he just randomizes it to keep going.

    • @dderudito
      @dderudito Před 4 lety

      Hahaha

    • @jag831
      @jag831 Před 3 lety +1

      Haha that's why I love this kind of videos. "Look at this ebp register, for example. B stands for base and B is the second letter of the latin alphabet. It is allocated in 0x6404whatever5A in memory"

    • @fetchstixRHD
      @fetchstixRHD Před 3 lety +1

      To be fair, there was the video on stacks which anyone who wasn't familiar with could go and watch, so there isn't [wasn't] much point of repeating what's been done already.

  • @taubrafi
    @taubrafi Před 8 lety +4

    Kali!

  • @Nekology87
    @Nekology87 Před 2 lety +1

    wow! such an insightful glimpse at how computers "think" and Dr. Pound you are so charimastic ^___^ thank you Computerphile for this video!! I'm just begining my programing education and this fills my cup with drive to push through learning the basics knowing later i will be able to excecute as my will wills

  • @supermegauberful
    @supermegauberful Před 8 lety

    That's actually very well explained! Keep up the good work.

  • @navalkumarshukla9447
    @navalkumarshukla9447 Před 2 lety +3

    I really liked the way he taught, didn't get it,but liked it xD

  • @Calin42
    @Calin42 Před 8 lety +3

    when a video on the ROP chains? with ASLR on and nX :p

  • @pierreaupeix
    @pierreaupeix Před 8 lety

    This was very interesting. More of this please!

  • @michalski9141
    @michalski9141 Před 2 lety +1

    this is genuinely great content, very informative and well made

  • @ttttt_
    @ttttt_ Před 7 lety +301

    "there is nothing you can't do as root"
    except makepkg on arch :(

    • @nik123true
      @nik123true Před 7 lety +2

      nice one xD

    • @sauron1427
      @sauron1427 Před 7 lety +49

      but you can create a user with whatever password you like, su into that user and run makepkg. you can still get ANYTHING done if you have root access.

    • @pedro.raimundo
      @pedro.raimundo Před 6 lety

      I LOLed.

    • @cybrhckr
      @cybrhckr Před 6 lety +8

      and some programmes does not allow you to run on root :D for security reasons

    • @Reth_Hard
      @Reth_Hard Před 6 lety +5

      You can't run VLC on root :(
      But you can patch it easily :)

  • @5upl1an
    @5upl1an Před 5 lety +14

    The real question is, how can someone be so damn motivated at 7 in the morning?!

  • @kamoroso94
    @kamoroso94 Před 8 lety

    This was an awesome video! I remember learning about this in class but not how to exploit it and see it in action.

  • @jasonford2877
    @jasonford2877 Před 4 lety

    This video explains it better than a $2000 course I've been doing in Cyber Security (which goes into far more than just BOF) Drawing it tremendously helped me understand it!

  • @rchandraonline
    @rchandraonline Před 8 lety +35

    On the original diagram: Functions do not (normally) go on the stack. The stack is only data (including return addresses). With architectures having hardware support for not executing data (often called an "NX" bit), such as a lot of the Intel processors, trying to execute a function on the stack with the NX bit set would cause an exception, which in Linux in turn would generate a signal (something like SIGSEGV), and without a signal handler would kill the process. (Yay, memory protection!)
    oh...and I think you mean backslash x ninety.

    • @Computerphile
      @Computerphile  Před 8 lety +21

      +rchandraonline I've a feeling that's what Mike was talking about at the end.... >Sean

    • @rchandraonline
      @rchandraonline Před 8 lety +12

      ***** , oh, yeah...
      As Mike says (paraphrasing), there are so many things which would make great videos on what goes on in GDB and assembly...simply fascinating how all that stuff was developed over the years.

    • @JAN0L
      @JAN0L Před 8 lety +4

      +rchandraonline Function code doesn't, but all the local variables used by the function go on stack, otherwise recursive functions wouldn't be possible.

    • @stensoft
      @stensoft Před 8 lety +2

      +rchandraonline For running shell (or other simple tasks), NX bit is quite easy to workaround with return-to-libc attack. But that can be hardened with address randomization.

    • @GegoXaren
      @GegoXaren Před 8 lety

      gcc -fstack-protector-strong -std=c11 foo.c -o foo

  • @timt.4040
    @timt.4040 Před 6 lety +20

    Very helpful! What is the gdb command (not shown on screen) to list the 200 registers at the stack point of -550?

    • @jbrhsn8406
      @jbrhsn8406 Před 4 lety

      Google it Pal!

    • @abindieflasche100
      @abindieflasche100 Před 4 lety +1

      @@jbrhsn8406 what is it

    • @zerozone1412
      @zerozone1412 Před 3 lety +1

      @Tim Thompson did you find out what the command was? I need it😫 ..... thanks

    • @jag831
      @jag831 Před 3 lety +1

      Something like "x/500xw $esp -550" could work. I may be wrong

  • @tabeshforoughi1380
    @tabeshforoughi1380 Před 3 lety

    Thank You Dr. Mike.

  • @Piotr3kM
    @Piotr3kM Před 8 lety +1

    Great stuff, I love videos that actually show something working in practice, rather than just the theory. Moar pls!

  • @anirudhsarma4233
    @anirudhsarma4233 Před 7 lety +8

    Can anyone explain why 10 duplicates of the return address was needed as "padding"?

  • @harleyspeedthrust4013
    @harleyspeedthrust4013 Před 6 lety +8

    Ignorant friend: "Why would you ever use Assembly?"
    Me: "..."

  • @johnconnor7978
    @johnconnor7978 Před 6 lety

    The only truly knowledgeable bunch of geeks on the internet that also know how to explain what they know. You sirs earned by EIP hi5

  • @SaeedAlFalasi
    @SaeedAlFalasi Před 3 lety

    Iv seen a bunch of videos on the same topic BUT THIS BY FAR is the best explanation !

  • @GegoXaren
    @GegoXaren Před 8 lety +5

    and this, kids, is why strcpy is removed from C11.
    Many of the string functions were removed and replaced with safe versions in C11.

    • @GegoXaren
      @GegoXaren Před 8 lety

      also use
      -fstack-protector,
      -fstack-protector-all
      or
      -fstack-protector-strong
      with gcc for non-time-critical stuff.

    • @anujmchitale
      @anujmchitale Před 5 lety

      strncpy is the replacement. The n is a parameter asking how much to copy. If more than the buffer length being used, the function itself won't compile.

  • @bluekeybo
    @bluekeybo Před 6 lety +9

    How would the "hacker" get the correct return address? They'd have to run gdb and list the addresses like in the video? How'd they do it automatically without root access?

    • @aneeshjoshi6641
      @aneeshjoshi6641 Před 5 lety +2

      I think:
      Since every process works assuming it has the full RAM and in C you can get the address of anything using & you can probably get it.

    • @chasehiatt5595
      @chasehiatt5595 Před 4 lety +1

      Gdb doesn't require root access

    • @bluekeybo
      @bluekeybo Před 4 lety

      @@chasehiatt5595 interesting

    • @rrestoring_faith
      @rrestoring_faith Před 3 lety

      gdb is just a debugging tool. Can run it on any executable if you have permissions to execute that executable.

  • @hannahwhitham3539
    @hannahwhitham3539 Před 4 lety

    I'm so happy this channel exists

  • @stephana7785
    @stephana7785 Před 4 lety

    Best explanation of shell code injection by far!

  • @woutervandenputte1356
    @woutervandenputte1356 Před 5 lety +6

    at 13:40 which command exactly do you use to list those 200 registers at the stack pointer minus 550

    • @nahue345
      @nahue345 Před 5 lety +3

      x/200xg $rsp (i think)

    • @chaoluncai4300
      @chaoluncai4300 Před 3 měsíci

      i dont get why stack ptr minus 550 but not just 508 if the program stopped at the return address, can anyone explain it please ?

  • @ryanofarrell186
    @ryanofarrell186 Před 7 lety +103

    Video is 17:29 long.
    Mathematicians, unite!

    • @tennicktenstyl
      @tennicktenstyl Před 7 lety +11

      What's so special about this? I'm not familiar with numbers and stuff

    • @Keithfert490
      @Keithfert490 Před 7 lety +65

      It's the smallest "taxi cab number": a positive integer expressible as the sum of two positive integer cubes in two different ways (1729=12^3+1^3=9^3+10^3).

    • @tennicktenstyl
      @tennicktenstyl Před 7 lety +10

      Oh, that's nice.

    • @sadrien
      @sadrien Před 7 lety +56

      Don't worry if you don't understand why that is important, because it really isn't.

    • @Quantumoprh
      @Quantumoprh Před 7 lety +3

      The quotient 0.58620689655 is used 731 times in this txt document:
      ftp://ftp.sanger.ac.uk/pub/1000genomes/zd1/ctcf/chip_seq_quantitation/rel_2012-09-21/cl.txt

  • @MeditatingDennis
    @MeditatingDennis Před 2 lety

    I like how the guy gets excited and makes me excited aswell!!

  • @jamescolley6983
    @jamescolley6983 Před 7 lety

    Wow, great job making this information understandable to a layman such as myself. I'm getting a "driver overran stack buffer" blue screen on Windows 10 and I'm blousing about looking for a fix, I'm not sure I have one but at least I understand what a stack buffer is now. Thanks!

  • @marsgal42
    @marsgal42 Před 8 lety +6

    I'm guess I'm showing my age when I mention that this was how the Morris worm back in 1988 infected systems. :-)

    • @jag831
      @jag831 Před 3 lety

      Cool! I was wondering on actual, real cases in which this has happened

  • @supernaturalswampaids8083

    Cover the iPhone/Apple/FBI issue!

    • @Computerphile
      @Computerphile  Před 8 lety +24

      +Reck Tominvayed Can you wait til Friday.... :) >Sean

    • @supernaturalswampaids8083
      @supernaturalswampaids8083 Před 8 lety +11

      +Computerphile
      Yay! Thanks for the reply as well! I'm a huge fan!
      ....but I used to be a small air conditioner.
      Had to :P

    • @jasonneu81
      @jasonneu81 Před 7 lety +2

      +Player Name If you used to be a small air conditioner and now you're a huge fan then you must have been an intermediate ventilation system at some point, right :D ?

  • @ugaaga198
    @ugaaga198 Před 9 měsíci

    I think its not possible to explain it better! EXCELLENT

  • @MarcinKonarski
    @MarcinKonarski Před 8 lety

    One of the best videos on Computerphile. Mike really knows his trade.

  • @Dusk-MTG
    @Dusk-MTG Před 4 lety +5

    *Segmentation fault*
    Me: "Oh damn, I fcked up."
    Peter Parker: "That's exactly what we wanted."

  • @riyaz4455
    @riyaz4455 Před 7 lety +4

    +Computerphile
    What is the GDB command used here "czcams.com/video/1S0aBV-Waeo/video.html"
    What is the GDB command to list some blocks of memory..???
    I have a session on the same topic and I really wanna use this example.....

  • @lexmarkbites
    @lexmarkbites Před 4 lety

    He is a genius and easily explained how stack diagram works! I easily understood it! Thank you!

  • @noahwilliams8996
    @noahwilliams8996 Před 8 lety

    This was awesome. I've always wondered how people can pull off a code injection attack, and this is how it's done.

  • @JadarDev
    @JadarDev Před 8 lety +10

    zsh is an older shell that doesn't have protections?! I use zsh all the time, I prefer it over bash because it has plugins.. How is that an old shell..?

    • @framegrace1
      @framegrace1 Před 8 lety +1

      +JadarDev Yeah, is maybe the newest one. (Is younger than bash,ksh,etc...) But lots of exploits use it, not sure why. Maybe is just a hacker preference. (Like using rar instead of zip)

    • @unforkableonion5081
      @unforkableonion5081 Před 8 lety

      +Marc Gràcia Those who are the geeks among geeks, use zsh...is a sign of distinction!! please try 7zip and forget the rest ;)

    • @michaelpound9891
      @michaelpound9891 Před 8 lety +1

      Sh is also fine for exploits. You can't use bash though because it drops out of root as soon as it starts. Too secure!

    • @pat5star
      @pat5star Před 4 lety

      Michael Pound huh? sh is is just a link to bash by default. Or you can set sh to to point to your shell of preference, but as far as I know there isn’t any shell called sh.

  • @umarsalmanrao5
    @umarsalmanrao5 Před 4 lety +3

    13:53 which command did he use here?
    x/200x $(ebp-100)
    Was it this?

  • @JeshuranPaul
    @JeshuranPaul Před 6 lety

    Extremely informative! Loved every second of this

  • @emrekantar5003
    @emrekantar5003 Před rokem

    Might be by far the best explanation i’ve ever watched