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Static Code Analysis for Smali

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If you ever have looked at Android applications you know to appreciate the ability of analyzing your target at the most advanced level. Dynamic program analysis will give you a pretty good overview of your applications activities and general behaviour. However sometimes you'll want to just analyze your application without running it. You'll want to have a look at its components, analyze how they interact and how data is tainted from one point to another.

This is was the major factor driving the development of smalisca. There are indeed some good reasons for a static code analysis before the dynamic one. Before interacting with the application I like to know how the application has been build, if there is any API and generate all sort of call flow graphs. In fact graphs have been very important to me since they visualize things. Instead of jumping from file to file, from class to class, I just look at the graphs.

While graph building has been an important reason for me to code such a tool, smalisca has some other neat features you should read about.

Features

At the moment there are some few major functionalities like:

  • parsing

    You can parse a whole directory of Smali files and extract:

    • class information
    • class properties
    • class methods
    • calls between methods of different classes

    You can then export the results as JSON or SQLite.

    Have a loot at the parsing page for more information.

  • analyzing

    After exporting the results you'll get an interactive prompt to take a closer look at your parsed data. You can search for classes, properties, methods and even method calls. You can then apply several filters to your search criterias like:

    smalisca> sc -c class_name -p test -r 10 -x path -s class_type
    

    This command will search for 10 (-r 10) classes which contain the pattern test (-p) in their class name (-c). Afterwards the command will exclude the column path (-x path) from the results and sort them by the class type (-s).

    Let's have a look at another example:

    smalisca> scl -fc com/android -fm init -r 10
    

    This will search for all method calls whose calling class name contains the pattern com/android (-fc). Additionally we can look for calls originating from methods whose name contain the pattern init (-fm).

    You can of course read your commands from a file and analyze your results in a batch- like manner:

    $ cat cmd.txt
    sc -c class_name -p com/gmail/xlibs -r 10 -x path
    quit
    $ ./smalisca.py analyzer -i results.sqlite -f sqlite -c cmd.txt
    ...
    

    Have a loot at the analysis page for more information.

  • web API

    smalisca provides a REST web service in order to easily interact with the results by just using a web client. This way you can access data in your own (fancy) web application and have a clean separation between backend and frontend.

    Read more about the available REST API at the web API page.

  • visualizing

    I think this the most valuable feature of smalisca. The ability to visualize your results in a structured way makes your life more comfortable. Depending on what you're interested in, this tool has several graph drawing features I'd like to promote.

    At first you can draw your packages including their classes, properties and methods:

    smalisca> dc -c class_name -p test -f dot -o /tmp/classes.dot
    :: INFO       Wrote results to /tmp/classes.dot
    smalisca>
    

    This will first search classes whose class name contains test and then export the results in the Graphviz DOT language. You can then manually generate a graph using dot, neato, circo etc. Or you do that using the interactive prompt:

    smalisca> dc -c class_name -p test -f pdf -o /tmp/classes.pdf --prog neato
    :: INFO       Wrote results to /tmp/classes.pdf
    smalisca>
    

    Have a loot at the drawing page for more information.

Screenshots

Basic usage

Output results as table.

Cross calls

Basic relationships between classes and modules.

Have a look at the screenshots page.

Installation

Refer to the installation page. Requirements:

  • Python (2.x / 3.x)
  • cement
  • Graphviz
  • SQLAlchemy

How to use it

After installing the tool, you may want to first pick up an Android application (APK) to play with. Use apktool or my own tool ADUS to dump the APKs content. For the sake of simplicity I'll be using FakeBanker which I've analyzed in a previous blog post.

First touch

But first let's have a look at the tools main options:

$ smalisca --help

                           /\_ \    __
  ____    ___ ___      __  \//\ \  /\_\    ____    ___     __
 /',__\ /' __` __`\  /'__`\  \ \ \ \/\ \  /',__\  /'___\ /'__`\
/\__, `\/\ \/\ \/\ \/\ \L\.\_ \_\ \_\ \ \/\__, `\/\ \__//\ \L\.\_
\/\____/\ \_\ \_\ \_\ \__/.\_\/\____\\ \_\/\____/\ \____\ \__/.\_\
 \/___/  \/_/\/_/\/_/\/__/\/_/\/____/ \/_/\/___/  \/____/\/__/\/_/


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
:: Author:       Victor <Cyneox> Dorneanu
:: Desc:         Static Code Analysis tool for Smali files
:: URL:          http://nullsecurity.net, http://{blog,www}.dornea.nu
:: Version:      0.2
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

usage: smalisca (sub-commands ...) [options ...] {arguments ...}

[--] Static Code Analysis (SCA) tool for Baskmali (Smali) files.

commands:

  analyzer
    [--] Analyze results using an interactive prompt or on the command line.

  parser
    [--] Parse files and extract data based on Smali syntax.

  web
    [--] Analyze results using web API.

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --debug               toggle debug output
  --quiet               suppress all output
  --log-level {debug,info,warn,error,critical}
                        Change logging level (Default: info)
  -v, --version         show program's version number and exit

Parsing

I'll first parse some directory for Smali files before doing the analysis stuff:

$ smalisca parser -l ~/tmp/FakeBanker2/dumped/smali -s java -f sqlite  -o fakebanker.sqlite

...

:: INFO       Parsing .java files in /home/victor/tmp/FakeBanker2/dumped/smali ...
:: INFO       Finished parsing!
:: INFO       Exporting results to SQLite
:: INFO         Extract classes ...
:: INFO         Extract class properties ...
:: INFO         Extract class methods ...
:: INFO         Extract calls ...
:: INFO         Commit changes to SQLite DB
:: INFO         Wrote results to fakebanker.sqlite
:: INFO       Finished scanning

Also have a look at the parsing page for further information.

Analyzing

Now you're free to do whatever you want with your generated exports. You can inspect the SQLite DB directly or use smaliscas analysis features:

$ smalisca analyzer -f sqlite -i fakebanker.sqlite

...


smalisca>sc -x path -r 10
+----+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+-------+
| id | class_name                                                                              | class_type         | class_package            | depth |
+----+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+-------+
| 1  | Landroid/support/v4/net/ConnectivityManagerCompat                                       | public             | Landroid.support.v4.net  | 5     |
| 2  | Landroid/support/v4/view/AccessibilityDelegateCompat$AccessibilityDelegateJellyBeanImpl |                    | Landroid.support.v4.view | 5     |
| 3  | Landroid/support/v4/view/ViewCompat$ViewCompatImpl                                      | interface abstract | Landroid.support.v4.view | 5     |
| 4  | Landroid/support/v4/app/ActivityCompatHoneycomb                                         |                    | Landroid.support.v4.app  | 5     |
| 5  | Landroid/support/v4/app/NoSaveStateFrameLayout                                          |                    | Landroid.support.v4.app  | 5     |
| 6  | Landroid/support/v4/net/ConnectivityManagerCompatHoneycombMR2                           |                    | Landroid.support.v4.net  | 5     |
| 7  | Lcom/gmail/xpack/BuildConfig                                                            | public final       | Lcom.gmail.xpack         | 4     |
| 8  | Landroid/support/v4/app/BackStackRecord$Op                                              | final              | Landroid.support.v4.app  | 5     |
| 9  | Landroid/support/v4/app/FragmentManagerImpl                                             | final              | Landroid.support.v4.app  | 5     |
| 10 | Landroid/support/v4/app/ShareCompat$ShareCompatImpl                                     | interface abstract | Landroid.support.v4.app  | 5     |
+----+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------+--------------------------+-------+

Also refer to the analysis page for more available commands and options.

Drawing

Please refer to the drawing page for full examples.

License

smalisca has been released under the MIT license. Have a look at the LICENSE.rst file.

Credits

This tool is dedicated to Lică. Many thanks also go to:

  • Stephen McAllister

    • Many thanks for all those hours full of APK debugging and great ideas
  • My gf

    • Thank you very much for your patience and understanding!
  • nullsecurity.net

    • Hack the planet!

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