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TELEPRESENCE, KUBERNETES

Code Injection on Linux and macOS with LD_PRELOAD

Itamar Turner-Trauring
April 18, 2017 | 8 min read
Code Injection on Linux and macOS with LD_PRELOAD

Have you ever wanted to make a program behave differently without modifying the source code? On Linux and macOS (the operating system formerly known as OS X) you can do this with the

LD_PRELOAD
or
DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES
mechanisms respectively, which allow you to override the system and library calls from a particular process. While this may seem dangerous, it’s actually pretty easy to do and can be quite useful.

In this post I’ll discuss:

  • Why you might want to do this.
  • How these mechanisms work.
  • Some limitations of the mechanisms involved, some of which impact both Linux and macOS, and some of which are limited to macOS.

Code injection for fun and profit

When you run a program it calls out to shared libraries, and to the kernel using system calls. Overriding these calls allows you to override the program’s behavior in a variety of interesting ways.

For example, your program will often need to check the current time. What if you wanted to change it to be a different value? You could change the whole system’s clock, but that’s problematic and may have unexpected side-effects on other programs.

Alternatively, you can use faketime to override the calls that retrieve the current time. Instead of getting the real time a wrapped process will get whatever time you choose to set:

$ /bin/date
Thu Apr 13 14:29:25 EDT 2017
$ faketime '2008-12-24 08:15:42' /bin/date
Wed Dec 24 08:15:42 EST 2008

Other uses include making a process look like root when setting file permissions, or pretending you have changed the root of the filesystem.

Here at Ambassador Labs, to give another example, we’ve been working on Telepresence, a program that makes a local process appear as if it were in a remote cluster running Kubernetes. Kubernetes runs its own DNS server, with custom domain names like

myservice.default.svc.cluster.local
, and has its own internal IPs for services. We want these IPs and DNS records to be used by the local process.

There are other ways to achieve this effect, but we’ve been using torsocks, which overrides TCP socket connections
and DNS lookups and routes them through a proxy. The original purpose of

torsocks
was to route calls through the Tor onion router network, which gives users greater privacy. Here you can see how my external IP changes when I run a process under
torsocks
. I send a request to ipify.org, an API that returns the callers IP address, and as you can see
torsocks
transparently routes my HTTP request through various Tor proxies:

$ curl http://api.ipify.org?format=json # get my external IP
{"ip":"98.216.104.162"}
$ torsocks curl http://api.ipify.org?format=json # get my external IP, via tor
{"ip":"144.217.161.119"}
$ host 144.217.161.119
119.161.217.144.in-addr.arpa domain name pointer tor-exit.clutterbuck.uk.

So how do all these programs work?

No process is an island

When you run a program the resulting process cannot operate on its own. It needs functionality from libraries and from the kernel; the libraries may in turn depend on other libraries or on the kernel. Consider this simple C program:

#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
printf("Hello, world!");
return 0;
}
```</stdio.h>
Note that this and later examples are on Linux; I'll mention differences from macOS where relevant.
We can compile the program statically and run the resulting binary:
```console
$ gcc -static hello.c -o hello-static
$ chmod +x hello-static
$ ./hello-static
Hello, world!

The size of the binary is rather large, considering what it does:

$ ls -lh hello-static
-rwxrwxr-x 1 itamarst itamarst 888K Apr 13 14:44 hello-static

That’s because we compiled it statically: all the code it relies on, other than the kernel, is included in the file. We can watch calls to the kernel, aka system calls, using the

strace
utility (or
dtruss
on macOS):

$ strace ./hello-static > /dev/null
execve("./hello-static", ["./hello-static"], [/* 91 vars */]) = 0
... elided ...
write(1, "Hello, world!\n", 14) = 14
exit_group(0) = ?
+++ exited with 0 +++

As you can see the

printf
library call ended up calling the
write
system call.

From system calls to shared libraries

Most binaries are not distributed as static binaries. Instead of library code being included in the binary, the binary just notes the shared libraries it relies on, and they get loaded at runtime:

$ gcc -fPIC hello.c -o hello-shared
$ chmod +x hello-shared
$ ./hello-shared
Hello, world!
$ ls -lh hello-shared
-rwxrwxr-x 1 itamarst itamarst 8.4K Apr 13 14:47 hello-shared

We’ve gone from a binary of 888k to only 8k!

So what are these shared libraries the binary relies on? We can list them using

ldd
(or the similar but not identical
otool
on macOS):

$ ldd /bin/echo
linux-vdso.so.1 => (0x00007fff1b726000)
libc.so.6 => /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 (0x00007fef59330000)
/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (0x000056139fb3e000)
  • linux-vdso.so.1
    is a way for the Linux kernel to inject kernel code into the process memory, so that certain system calls run faster.
  • libc.so.6
    is the C standard library, which includes APIs like
    printf
    .
  • ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
    is the dynamic linker: this is the code that knows how to load other shared libraries, like
    libc.so.6
    , into the process memory on startup.

Just like the static binary we can use

strace
to watch the system calls from running the shared binary:

$ strace ./hello-shared > /dev/null
execve("./hello-shared", ["./hello-shared"], [/* 91 vars */]) = 0
... elided ...
open("/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = 3
read(3, "\177ELF\2\1\1\3\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\3\0>\0\1\0\0\0P\t\2\0\0\0\0\0"..., 832) = 832
... elided ...
write(1, "Hello, world!\n", 14) = 14
exit_group(0) = ?
+++ exited with 0 +++

Notice how this time the binary loaded additional files, the

libc.so.6
shared library.

In the static binary the implementation of

printf
was included in the binary itself, part of the extra 880kb of data in that binary.In the shared binary that code lives in
libc.so.6
, and we can use the
ltrace
utility to see that call:

$ ltrace ./hello-shared > /dev/null
__libc_start_main(0x400526, 1, 0x7ffc47290b48, 0x400540 <unfinished>
puts("Hello, world!") = 14
+++ exited (status 0) +++
```</unfinished>
Where's `printf`, you may ask?
As it turns out, the generated binary isn't using `printf`, it's actually using `puts` instead. The compiler has decided to use `puts` as an optimization since no formatting is involved and so `puts` is a simpler and faster equivalent. We can see that `puts` is defined but not implemented in the binary by using the `nm` utility to look up undefined symbols:
```console
$ nm -u ./hello-shared
w __gmon_start__
w _ITM_deregisterTMCloneTable
w _ITM_registerTMCloneTable
w _Jv_RegisterClasses
U __libc_start_main@@GLIBC_2.2.5
U puts@@GLIBC_2.2.5

Injecting shared libraries

Remember how

ld-linux
loads shared libraries? It also does some other useful things. In particular, if you set the
LD_PRELOAD
environment variable it will load the shared libraries set in that variable into the process. (On macOS this variable is called
DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES
.)

This injected library can override functions in other shared libraries, and if we choose call back to the original version. For example, recall that we discovered that

printf
is implemented using
puts
. Let’s override
puts
with the following shared library:

#include <dlfcn.h></dlfcn.h>
typedef int (*original_puts_function_type)(const char *str);
/* Our custom version that will override the libc version: */
int puts(const char *str)
{
/* Load the original puts(): */
original_puts_function_type original_puts;
original_puts = (original_puts_function_type) dlsym(RTLD_NEXT,"puts");
/* Call it twice: */
original_puts(str);
return original_puts(str);
}

Now we can compile this into a library, and then use it to override the call to

puts
in our shared binary:

$ gcc -shared -fPIC -o doubleputs.so doubleputs.c -ldl
$ LD_PRELOAD=./doubleputs.so ./hello-shared
Hello, world!
Hello, world!

The

ld-linux
linker loads
doubleputs.so
into the process, and all calls to
puts
get routed to our overridden version. And that’s how
torsocks
and
faketime
and
fakechroot
all work: by overriding system or library calls with custom versions using the
LD_PRELOAD
mechanism.

Caveats and limitations

Code injection has its share of problems, of course.

Which functions?

Remember how we compiled a program with

printf()
but got a binary with
puts()
instead? More broadly, the library calls you need to wrap in order to inject code are hard to predict.

Some library calls will have multiple variants, some library calls will share internal private implementations with other library calls… none of them are likely to be designed for code injection.

Even worse, different operating systems and compilers will require you to wrap different calls:

  • Our original example using
    gcc
    on Linux ended up using
    puts
    .
  • On OS X I got a binary that called
    _printf
    .
  • On Linux using the
    clang
    compiler instead of
    gcc
    I got a binary that called
    printf
    .

Static binaries and Go

Since

LD_PRELOAD
and the macOS equivalent work using the dynamic linker, it doesn’t work for static binaries. Notice we don’t get a double print:

$ LD_PRELOAD=./doubleputs.so ./hello-static
Hello, world!

Typically the only place you’ll encounter static binaries is when writing Go. The default Go compiler has its own mechanism for calling system calls directly, and tends to ship static binaries. If you want to use

LD_PRELOAD
with Go your best bet is to use
gccgo
, the
gcc
-based Go compiler.

Security problems

For security reasons

LD_PRELOAD
doesn’t work with suid binaries: the ability to inject arbitrary code into a process running as another user has some obvious problems.

On macOS there is an additional problem. Newer versions of macOS have a security subsystem called

System Integrity Protection
. For our purposes the problem is that it prevents injecting code via
DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES
(the macOS equivalent of
LD_PRELOAD
) into any binary in
/bin
,
/sbin
,
/usr/bin
and
/usr/sbin
.

Luckily, there’s an easy workaround. Just create a new directory, copy all the binaries from

/bin
,
/sbin
,
/usr/bin
and
/usr/sbin
into that directory, and then add it to the start of your
$PATH
environment variable. Once the binaries are out of those special directories code injection works just fine, and since they’re only 100MB copying them is quite fast.

Further reading

  • Rafał Cieślak wrote an excellent intro to
    LD_PRELOAD
    ; I borrowed the
    dlsym
    code from there.
  • The man pages for ld-linux and dyld explain the
    LD_PRELOAD
    and
    DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES
    environment variables respectively in more detail.

Check out Telepresence

Have a local development environment for a remote Kubernetes cluster