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Run executables from memory, over the network, on Windows, Linux, OpenVMS... routers... spaceships... toasters etc.

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NetELF

Run the client side of NetELF to download and execute a program over the network from a server. The server sends an arbitrary binary and command-line arguments.

Where possible it will execute the program in-memory, it will not leave files on the filesystem. This makes it ideal for pentests, emergencies and general systems automation.

Originally inspired by a post on this post on comp.unix.programmer.

Supported Platforms

Fully supported & tested:

  • Linux
  • Windows 7

Regularly tested & partially supported:

  • Solaris x86, Sparc
  • OpenVMS VAX, Alpha
  • Ultrix VAX, RISC
  • Windows 95+, NT 3.51+

Others that it should work on

  • FreeBSD
  • OSX
  • OSF/1
  • HP-UX
  • QNX
  • z/OS

Example

make
./server.py /bin/ls -la &> /dev/null &
./netelf 127.0.0.1 1337
./netelf 127.0.0.1 1337 

In-memory Execution

I looked into the source code for glibc and musl to see what goes on behind the scenes, interesting, it executes the file from /proc/self/fd/%d.

See the following:

Mount options on tmpfs permiate through to /proc/self/fd/, so to disable you need to add noexec to /dev/shm and other tmpfs mounts:

sudo mount /dev/shm/ -o remount,rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec -t tmpfs

This causes fexecve: Permission denied because the shm_open succeeded, but silently the file descriptor didn't get +x permission, doing fchmod on the handle won't work either. The file permissions can be checked with fstat.

Regarding which executables will work with this technique, the most reliable have been self-contained, statically linked executables. In some cases (where the same libc was used on the host used to compile the executable and on the host it is being executed on, and where both have the same libraries/dependencies), dynamically linked executables have worked. Executables which rely on specific environments or external files generally tend to fail.

Furthermore, it is possible to pass arguments to the executable you are running in-memory! The name of the process is derived from argv[0], this can be customised using --argv0 [kthreadd]. By default it will use the basename of the executable file.

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