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I am learning how to exploit a buffer overflow. Below is the program I am playing with

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>

int main(int argc, char **argv) 
{
    char buffer[256];
    printf("%p\n", buffer);
    strcpy(buffer, argv[1]);
    printf("%s\n", buffer);
    return 0;
}

I compile this program with: gcc -fno-stack-protector -z execstack program.c -o program I loaded this program in gdb: gdb ./program If I issue following command: run $(python -c 'print "A" * 3000') It will overwrite the registers as desired:

rbp            0x4141414141414141   0x4141414141414141
rsp            0x7fffffffd938   0x7fffffffd938
r8             0x4141414141414141   0x4141414141414141
r9             0x4141414141414141   0x4141414141414141
r10            0x4141414141414141   0x4141414141414141

..... But if I give arguments to the program using IO redirection registers' values are not overwritten as desired.

fuzz.py

#!/usr/bin/python
print 'A' * 3000

I output all 'A's to file f using fuzz.py > f

I run the program in gdb gdb ./program Now If I give a argument to program using IO redirection I get abnormal output:

run < f

I get the following error:

Stopped reason: SIGSEGV __strcpy_sse2_unaligned () at ../sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/strcpy-sse2-unaligned.S:296 296 ../sysdeps/x86_64/multiarch/strcpy-sse2-unaligned.S: No such file or directory.

Why I am getting this error __strcpy_sse2_unaligned while if I pass arguments using run $(python -c 'print "A" * 3000') I will only get SIGSEGV error which I desired.

info registers:

rbp            0x7fffffffe4f0   0x7fffffffe4f0
rsp            0x7fffffffe3d8   0x7fffffffe3d8
r8             0x0  0x0
r9             0xf  0xf
r10            0x5d 0x5d

Why are the registers not overwritten by 'A's?

Q1) Why are passing arguments in gdb using:

run $(python -c 'print "A" * 3000')

and

run < f

not equal? f is the file which contains 3000 'A's.

Q2) What is the meaning of this error: __strcpy_sse2_unaligned ()

1 Answer 1

2

You are taking input from command line arguments, not the standard input:

strcpy(buffer, argv[1]);

So you should use:

run $(python -c 'print "A" * 3000')

The < redirection would work if you're reading from stdin, for example with scanf.

The __strcpy_sse2_unaligned SIGSEGV is caused by you trying to strcpy from uninitialized memory (argv[1], which is actually NULL since it's argv[argc] in your case). GDB then tries to find the source for that internal function, but fails.

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