The Mac Hacker′s Handbook

Author:   Charlie Miller ,  Dino Dai Zovi
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
ISBN:  

9780470395363


Pages:   384
Publication Date:   20 February 2009
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Mac Hacker′s Handbook


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Overview

As more and more vulnerabilities are found in the Mac OS X (Leopard) operating system, security researchers are realizing the importance of developing proof-of-concept exploits for those vulnerabilities. This unique tome is the first book to uncover the flaws in the Mac OS X operating system?and how to deal with them. Written by two white hat hackers, this book is aimed at making vital information known so that you can find ways to secure your Mac OS X systems, and examines the sorts of attacks that are prevented by Leopard?s security defenses, what attacks aren?t, and how to best handle those weaknesses.

Full Product Details

Author:   Charlie Miller ,  Dino Dai Zovi
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Imprint:   John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Dimensions:   Width: 18.90cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.20cm
Weight:   0.612kg
ISBN:  

9780470395363


ISBN 10:   0470395362
Pages:   384
Publication Date:   20 February 2009
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Foreword. Introduction. Part I Mac OS X Basics. Chapter 1 Mac OS X Architecture. Basics. XNU. Mach. BSD. I/O Kit. Darwin and Friends. Tools of the Trade. Ktrace/DTrace. Objective-C. Universal Binaries and the Mach-O File Format. Universal Binaries. Mach-O File Format. Example. Bundles. launchd. Leopard Security. Library Randomization. Executable Heap. Stack Protection (propolice). Firewall. Sandboxing (Seatbelt). References. Chapter 2 Mac OS X Parlance. Bonjour!. Get an IP Address. Set Up Name Translation. Service Discovery. Bonjour. mDNSResponder. Source Code. QuickTime. .mov. RTSP. Conclusion. References. Chapter 3 Attack Surface. Searching the Server Side. Nonstandard Listening Processes. Cutting into the Client Side. Safari. All of Safari?s Children. Safe File Types. Having Your Cake. Conclusion . References. Part II Discovering Vulnerabilities. Chapter 4 Tracing and Debugging. Pathetic ptrace. Good Ol? GDB. DTrace. D Programming Language. Describing Probes. Example: Using Dtrace. Example: Using ltrace. Example: Instruction Tracer/Code-Coverage Monitor. Example: Memory Tracer. PyDbg. PyDbg Basics. Memory Searching. In-Memory Fuzzing. Binary Code Coverage with Pai Mei. iTunes Hates You. Conclusion. References. Chapter 5 Finding Bugs. Bug-Hunting Strategies. Old-School Source-Code Analysis. Getting to the Source. Code Coverage. CanSecWest 2008 Bug. vi + Changelog = Leopard 0-day. Apple?s Prerelease-Vulnerability Collection. Fuzz Fun. Network Fuzzing. File Fuzzing. Conclusion. References. Chapter 6 Reverse Engineering. Disassembly Oddities. EIP-Relative Data Addressing. Messed-Up Jump Tables. Identifying Missed Functions. Reversing Obj-C. Cleaning Up Obj-C. Shedding Light on objc_msgSend Calls. Case Study. Patching Binaries. Conclusion. References. Part III Exploitation. Chapter 7 Exploiting Stack Overflows. Stack Basics. Stack Usage on PowerPC. Stack Usage on x86. Smashing the Stack on PowerPC. Smashing the Stack on x86. Exploiting the x86 Nonexecutable Stack. Return into system(). Executing the Payload from the Heap. Finding Useful Instruction Sequences. PowerPC. x86. Conclusion. References. Chapter 8 Exploiting Heap Overflows. The Heap. The Scalable Zone Allocator. Regions. Freeing and Allocating Memory. Overwriting Heap Metadata. Arbitrary 4-Byte Overwrite. Large Arbitrary Memory Overwrite. Obtaining Code Execution. Taming the Heap with Feng Shui. Fill ?Er Up. Feng Shui. WebKit?s JavaScript. Case Study. Feng Shui Example. Heap Spray. References. Chapter 9 Exploit Payloads. Mac OS X Exploit Payload Development. Restoring Privileges. Forking a New Process. Executing a Shell. Encoders and Decoders. Staged Payload Execution. Payload Components. PowerPC Exploit Payload. execve_binsh. system. decode_longxor. tcp_listen 231. tcp_connect. tcp_find. dup2_std_fds. vfork. Testing Simple Components. Putting Together Simple Payloads. Intel x86 Exploit Payloads. remote_execution_loop. inject_bundle. Testing Complex Components. Conclusion. References. Chapter 10 Real-World Exploits. QuickTime RTSP Content-Type Header Overflow. Triggering the Vulnerability. Exploitation on PowerPC. Exploitation on x86. mDNSResponder UPnP Location Header Overflow. Triggering the Vulnerability. Exploiting the Vulnerability. Exploiting on PowerPC. QuickTime QTJava toQTPointer() Memory Access. Exploiting toQTPointer(). Obtaining Code Execution. Conclusion. References. Part IV Post-Exploitation. Chapter 11 Injecting, Hooking, and Swizzling. Introduction to Mach. Mach Abstractions. Mach Security Model Mach Exceptions. Mach Injection. Remote Threads. Remote Process Memory. Loading a Dynamic Library or Bundle. Inject-Bundle Usage. Example: iSight Photo Capture. Function Hooking. Example: SSLSpy. Objective-C Method Swizzling. Example: iChat Spy. Conclusion. References. Chapter 12 Rootkits. Kernel Extensions. Hello Kernel. System Calls. Hiding Files. Hiding the Rootkit. Maintaining Access across Reboots. Controlling the Rootkit. Creating the RPC Server. Injecting Kernel RPC Servers. Calling the Kernel RPC Server. Remote Access. Hardware-Virtualization Rootkits. Hyperjacking. Rootkit Hypervisor. Conclusion. References. Index.

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Author Information

CharlIe Millerwon the second CanSecWest Pwn2Own contest in 2008 and was named one of the Top 10 Computer Hackers of 2008 by Popular Mechanics. Dino Dai Zovi won the first CanSecWest Pwn2Own contest in 2007 and was named one of the 15 Most Influential People in Security by eWEEK.

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