问题
I developed a small cpp program on platform of Ubuntu-Linux 11.10. Now I want to reverse engineer it. I am beginner. I use such tools: GDB 7.0, hte editor, hexeditor.
For the first time I made it pretty easy. With help of symbolic information I founded the address of main function and made everything I needed.
Then I striped (--strip-all
) executable elf-file and I have some problems.
I know that main
function starts from 0x8960 in this program.
But I haven't any idea how should I find this point without this knowledge.
I tried debug my program step by step with gdb but it goes into __libc_start_main
then into the ld-linux.so.3
(so, it finds and loads the shared libraries needed by a program). I debugged it about 10 minutes. Of course, may be in 20 minutes I can reach the main function's entry point, but, it seems, that more easy way has to exist.
What should I do to find the main
function's entry point without any symbolic info?
Could you advise me some good books/sites/other_sources from reverse engineering of elf-files with help of gdb?
Any help would be appreciated.
回答1:
Locating main()
in a stripped Linux ELF binary is straightforward. No symbol information is required.
The prototype for __libc_start_main is
int __libc_start_main(int (*main) (int, char**, char**),
int argc,
char *__unbounded *__unbounded ubp_av,
void (*init) (void),
void (*fini) (void),
void (*rtld_fini) (void),
void (*__unbounded stack_end));
The runtime memory address of main()
is the argument corresponding to the first parameter, int (*main) (int, char**, char**)
. This means that the last memory address saved on the runtime stack prior to calling __libc_start_main
is the memory address of main()
, since arguments are pushed onto the runtime stack in the reverse order of their corresponding parameters in the function definition.
One can enter main()
in gdb
in 4 steps:
- Find the program entry point
- Find where
__libc_start_main
is called - Set a break point to the address last saved on stack prior to the call to
_libc_start_main
- Let program execution
continue
until the break point formain()
is hit
The process is the same for both 32-bit and 64-bit ELF binaries.
Entering main()
in an example stripped 32-bit ELF binary called "test_32":
$ gdb -q -nh test_32
Reading symbols from test_32...(no debugging symbols found)...done.
(gdb) info file #step 1
Symbols from "/home/c/test_32".
Local exec file:
`/home/c/test_32', file type elf32-i386.
Entry point: 0x8048310
< output snipped >
(gdb) break *0x8048310
Breakpoint 1 at 0x8048310
(gdb) run
Starting program: /home/c/test_32
Breakpoint 1, 0x08048310 in ?? ()
(gdb) x/13i $eip #step 2
=> 0x8048310: xor %ebp,%ebp
0x8048312: pop %esi
0x8048313: mov %esp,%ecx
0x8048315: and $0xfffffff0,%esp
0x8048318: push %eax
0x8048319: push %esp
0x804831a: push %edx
0x804831b: push $0x80484a0
0x8048320: push $0x8048440
0x8048325: push %ecx
0x8048326: push %esi
0x8048327: push $0x804840b # address of main()
0x804832c: call 0x80482f0 <__libc_start_main@plt>
(gdb) break *0x804840b # step 3
Breakpoint 2 at 0x804840b
(gdb) continue # step 4
Continuing.
Breakpoint 2, 0x0804840b in ?? () # now in main()
(gdb) x/x $esp+4
0xffffd110: 0x00000001 # argc = 1
(gdb) x/s **(char ***) ($esp+8)
0xffffd35c: "/home/c/test_32" # argv[0]
(gdb)
Entering main()
in an example stripped 64-bit ELF binary called "test_64":
$ gdb -q -nh test_64
Reading symbols from test_64...(no debugging symbols found)...done.
(gdb) info file # step 1
Symbols from "/home/c/test_64".
Local exec file:
`/home/c/test_64', file type elf64-x86-64.
Entry point: 0x400430
< output snipped >
(gdb) break *0x400430
Breakpoint 1 at 0x400430
(gdb) run
Starting program: /home/c/test_64
Breakpoint 1, 0x0000000000400430 in ?? ()
(gdb) x/11i $rip # step 2
=> 0x400430: xor %ebp,%ebp
0x400432: mov %rdx,%r9
0x400435: pop %rsi
0x400436: mov %rsp,%rdx
0x400439: and $0xfffffffffffffff0,%rsp
0x40043d: push %rax
0x40043e: push %rsp
0x40043f: mov $0x4005c0,%r8
0x400446: mov $0x400550,%rcx
0x40044d: mov $0x400526,%rdi # address of main()
0x400454: callq 0x400410 <__libc_start_main@plt>
(gdb) break *0x400526 # step 3
Breakpoint 2 at 0x400526
(gdb) continue # step 4
Continuing.
Breakpoint 2, 0x0000000000400526 in ?? () # now in main()
(gdb) print $rdi
$3 = 1 # argc = 1
(gdb) x/s **(char ***) ($rsp+16)
0x7fffffffe35c: "/home/c/test_64" # argv[0]
(gdb)
A detailed treatment of program initialization and what occurs before main()
is called and how to get to main()
can be found be found in Patrick Horgan's tutorial "Linux x86 Program Start Up
or - How the heck do we get to main()?"
回答2:
As far as I know, once a program has been stripped, there is no straightforward way to locate the function that the symbol main
would have otherwise referenced.
The value of the symbol main
is not required for program start-up: in the ELF format, the start of the program is specified by the e_entry
field of the ELF executable header. This field normally points to the C library's initialization code, and not directly to main
.
While the C library's initialization code does call main()
after it has set up the C run time environment, this call is a normal function call that gets fully resolved at link time.
In some cases, implementation-specific heuristics (i.e., the specific knowledge of the internals of the C runtime) could be used to determine the location of main
in a stripped executable. However, I am not aware of a portable way to do so.
回答3:
If you have a very stripped version, or even a binary that is packed, as using UPX, you can gdb on it in the tough way as:
$ readelf -h echo | grep Entry
Entry point address: 0x103120
And then you can break at it in GDB as:
$ gdb mybinary
(gdb) break * 0x103120
Breakpoint 1 at 0x103120gdb)
(gdb) r
Starting program: mybinary
Breakpoint 1, 0x0000000000103120 in ?? ()
and then, you can see the entry instructions:
(gdb) x/10i 0x0000000000103120
=> 0x103120: bl 0x103394
0x103124: dcbtst 0,r5
0x103128: mflr r13
0x10312c: cmplwi r7,2
0x103130: bne 0x103214
0x103134: stw r5,0(r6)
0x103138: add r4,r4,r3
0x10313c: lis r0,-32768
0x103140: lis r9,-32768
0x103144: addi r3,r3,-1
I hope it helps
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9885545/how-to-find-the-main-functions-entry-point-of-elf-executable-file-without-any-s