Monday, July 20, 2015

Reverse Engineering nostalgia

I wrote this blog about a month ago. I thought it might amuse some of the nostalgic minded people around. After having read it, I dropped pushing it because it was too much about me (and I don't wish to blog about me) and not enough about the technology (which I do wish to blog on). Rethinking - maybe it would serve it's purpose of putting somebody in a nostalgic moode - an additional factor is that I've not gotten around to write anything else for a while and vacation time is comming up so it'll probably be a while before I do. with that in mind...

My first program and the first computer

The first program I ever wrote was malware. That is if malice as intent and effect make software malware. I was around 10 years old and my father had just convinced my mom that purchasing a monitor for his New Brain computer would not ruin our family. New Brain was a 32kb memory computer, with a terrible keyboard, 11 char calculator display and programmable in basic. To store programs and data my father had soldered around in my cassette recorder. The newly purchased monitor was monochrome and small. With monochrome I don’t mean black and white. I mean dark brown and beige yellowish. I was at least as fascinated with the computer as my geek father. It was probably no accident that I immediately realized that it was the perfect instrument for mischievous behavior. The program that I’d written was:
10 print “Karen is stupid”
20 goto 10

Karen is my older sister. And it's worth noting that even this simple program ran slow enough that you could see it scrolling down the screen. In those days - probably 1984ish - computers where magical things and one better listen when they had computed something. My sister screamed with rage - which was cool since she probably deserved it


Commodore

A few years later my father had upgrade the “New Brain” to a Commodore C128. By now I was fairly good in writing basic programs and was only half bad in Comal 80.  But I didn’t want to code. I wanted to crack games and have my “nickname” on the start up screen of the games everybody else played. My problem was that I need a machine code monitor and the only machine code monitor that I knew about for C64 was the “Final Cartridge”. I wasn’t allowed to buy it. So I instead booted in C128 mode and started monitor. Anybody who has ever used “monitor” has either given up quick or committed suicide at least that's what I think. Especially since I (and I assume most other people) did not have any C128 software to be debugged. I gave up.



Early PC days

1992 and I had my first break actually “reverse engineering” something. I’d stumbled upon a text called “act-13.txt”. It was about cracking PC games using debug.exe. The irony was that debug.exe was incredibly powerful and terrible at the same time. It served as hex editor, disk editor, debugger,disassembler and assembler build into one terrible scrolling user interface. The act-13.txt described how you used debug.exe to search through a binary file for “CD 13” that is interrupt 13. You’d have to have sufficient luck to also get hold of Ralph Browns interrupt list to have a chance of figuring out how that interrupt worked. Ralph Brown’s list was the documentation for programming the PC at that point. Say the MSDN of the day. Remember you had to find another old guy your age with the same interest who’d actually copy it on a 3.5” diskette for you. I were lucky. Copy protection in those days mostly worked around either letting the user enter a code from a code sheet or have the game distributed on a floppy diskette that had been formatted off spec. For the diskette copy protection we’d thus look for stuff that read physically from the diskette and this was interrupt 13. So search the entire code for int 13, then disassemble, see if you could figure out what it was doing and usually changing a JC/JNC into two nops or a JMP. If you’re a modern hacker you’re probably wondering what the carry flag has to do with anything. But in those day the most common call style was for bool to be returned in the carry flag using CLC and STC instructions respectively.
Call xxxx:xxxx
jnc yyyy

was a common construct. When you see the call xxxx:xxxx chances are you'd see the far call instruction as an exotic instruction, but back then far calls where used all the times as it was the only way to cross 64kb boundaries in code.


The first virus


In the early 90ies I became terribly obsessed with biological inspired terminology in computers. Virus, worms and artificial intelligence. These terms where in every computer journal you could imagine all the time. Dark Avenger and his nemesis Vesselin Bontchev where both heroes of mine. Pushing the boundaries of what could be done, on the verge of changing the world. I wanted to write a virus, but had absolutely no clue. So I tried to code up a neural network and thought at the time I'd succeeded. In retrospect I believe the chance of that being true is around 0. I made a good effort though, but I should've kept quiet - the comment in the school yard that "I'd gotten my inteligence to work" was too much of a softball not to follow me for a couple of years. I must've been around 14 at the time. Viruses where difficult to find, despite my best efforts. My first break through was getting an anti virus. IBM antivirus 2.0 if I recall correctly. It came with a human readable signature file with an jaw dropping 23 signatures. By playing around in this file and Norton Disk Edit I managed to have it detect other files as viruses. Soon after I got infect by the "form.a" virus and figured out how to remove it by running "sys.exe".  Form was a boot sector virus that spread when computers booted from 3.5" floppy drives. During the boot process it hooked interupts and could thus propagate it self when DOS called on these interupts to mount another floppy disc. Ironically boot sector viruses was amongst the first viruses and is the immediate ancestor to boot kits today - now considered a more advanced type of malware.

Getting connected

Within a year of moving out to attend university I were cohabiting with 4 computer geeks like myself. It turned into a massive skill upgrade for me due to synergies and because we ran the BBS "Psychic Damage" which at it's prime was probably the best (1 Zyxel 19k2 node and 1 ISDN 64kb node) H/P/A/V BBS in Denmark. HPAV stood for Hacking, Phreaking, Anarchy (explosives and drugs) and Virus. We had tons of documents on hacking, hacking logs, password files. We however also had house rules. No hacking, no virus. So even though we had a large achieve of virus I was banned from examining them. I stuck by the rules because, I did not want to lose moral high ground on the hacking question. At least one of the other guys would've loved to hack anything and there is little doubt that he was capable of doing it. The first waves of hacking busts by what seemed like Denmarks only security expert at the time, Joergen Bo Madsen, where highly publicized. And Mr. Madsen had mentioned in a lecture that our BBS had the password file from the department of computer science at my university lying around on our BBS. He was right too, but I haven't got a clue how he could've known and that kept me a bit scared. Never the less I would have the opportunity to reverse engineer my first virus in 1994. While making my first intro (a small graphics demo showing off coding skills in the day) I stumbled upon an int 21h, sub function 40h in another intro who's fading routine I wanted to steal. int 21h sub function 40h is the equivalent of WriteFile() today and it had no business in an intro. Turned out the intro was infected with Taipan. By debugging and disassembling a virus that had already infected our system was ok with the house rules, at least the way I bend them. So using the Game Tools Debugger, Softice Debugger and Sourcer disassembler I took apart the virus. Sourcer was the IDA of the day and Softice the most powerful debugger available. However in many cases Game Tools - a freeware debugger - was just more convenient. Softice by NuMega was by far the best debugger in that time period, however it spend too much memory and was unable to debug protected mode code that used the DOS4GW dos extender. For those reasons a great many times one would stray to Game Tools for real mode stuff and to the Watcom Debugger for protected mode stuff. This debugger came with the Watcom C compiler which was behind the DOS4GW so called dos extender. The Watcom debugger was however always very buggy, crashing all the time. Also in this period of time there where only one book you needed to own. Assembly Language Master Class (Wrox Press Master Class) and my roommate Mads owned a copy that where constantly being explored by yours truely.


1995 - 2000

1995 was of cause the year where Windows 95 came out and it was a game changer. It was the final architecture change to protected mode. It was also the year where internet became more than a VAX/VMS connection to "lynx", a text based HTML browser and almost no valuable information to find anywhere. I found my way to EFFNET on IRC and and met a large number of fellow assembler freaks and that boosted possibilities again to the power of 10. I had documentation, help, mentors,  tools and uncharted territory everywhere. One of the things I quickly became interested in was writing executable packers and crypters. There was a mailing list in the day for executable packers: Rose's exelist. Game tools, sourcer and softice was out. There could be only one debugger and that was WinIce from NuMega and anybody familiar with Softice could easily migrate. Obvious writting executable encrypters immediately meant defeating debuggers - especially Winice. I spend hours writing code to detect winice in all sort of devious ways. Not long after Mads bought Matt Pietrek's "Windows 95 System Programming Secrets". At first I didn't understand the book, and it my second go I immediately knew that the cool things he was doing, I could do too. Winice, lot's of coca cola and every secret in Windows 95 was mine. Even after Win2k came out Privilege elevation was so trivial that it wasn't even considered a feat unless it was particularly spectacular. Buffer overflows were in vogue and a dozen a dime. I remember Halvar Flake used to say: Find me a sprintf and I'll give you an exploit. That wasn't quite true, but not far from it. And it was then I (semi-) retired as a malware hobbyist and started working as a programmer. Ironically as the malware era had really just begun.



 act-13.txt can be found here: http://web.textfiles.com/hacking/act-13.txt
New Brain picture was stolen from Wikipedia.com
Machine code monitor picture was shamelessly stolen from C-64 Wiki.