A tool to dump and rebuild Java serialization streams and Java RMI packet contents in a more human readable form.
The tool does not deserialize the stream (i.e. objects in the stream are not instantiated), so it does not require access to the classes that were used in the stream*.
This tool was developed to support research into Java deserialization vulnerabilities after spending many hours manually decoding raw serialization streams to debug code!
Download v1.11 built and ready to run from here: https://github.com/NickstaDB/SerializationDumper/releases/download/1.13/SerializationDumper-v1.13.jar
* See the limitations section below for more details.
Update 19/12/2018: SerializationDumper now supports rebuilding serialization streams so you can dump a Java serialization stream to a text file, modify the hex or string values, then convert the text file back into a binary serialization stream. See the section below on Rebuilding Serialization Streams for an example of this.
Run build.sh
or build.bat
to compile the JAR from the latest sources.
SerializationDumper can take input in the form of hex-ascii encoded bytes on the command line, hex-ascii encoded bytes in a file, or a file containing raw serialized data. The following examples demonstrate its use:
$ java -jar SerializationDumper-v1.1.jar aced0005740004414243447071007e0000
STREAM_MAGIC - 0xac ed
STREAM_VERSION - 0x00 05
Contents
TC_STRING - 0x74
newHandle 0x00 7e 00 00
Length - 4 - 0x00 04
Value - ABCD - 0x41424344
TC_NULL - 0x70
TC_REFERENCE - 0x71
Handle - 8257536 - 0x00 7e 00 00
$ java -jar SerializationDumper-v1.1.jar -f hex-ascii-input-file.txt
STREAM_MAGIC - 0xac ed
STREAM_VERSION - 0x00 05
Contents
TC_NULL - 0x70
$ java -jar SerializationDumper-v1.1.jar -r raw-input-file.bin
STREAM_MAGIC - 0xac ed
STREAM_VERSION - 0x00 05
Contents
TC_CLASSDESC - 0x72
className
Length - 11 - 0x00 0b
Value - com.foo.Bar - 0x636f6d2e666f6f2e426172
serialVersionUID - 0x01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08
newHandle 0x00 7e 00 00
classDescFlags - 0x02 - SC_SERIALIZABLE
fieldCount - 0 - 0x00 00
classAnnotations
TC_ENDBLOCKDATA - 0x78
superClassDesc
TC_NULL - 0x70
As of 19/12/2018, SerializationDumper can do the reverse operation and convert a dumped serialization stream back into a raw byte stream. This can be useful for working with raw serialized streams because modifications can be made to the dumped text and be "recompiled" back into a byte stream.
To demonstrate the use of the stream rebuilding functionality, let's start with a simple serialization stream.
aced0005740004414243447071007e0000
We can dump this using SerializationDumper, as shown above, to get the following:
STREAM_MAGIC - 0xac ed
STREAM_VERSION - 0x00 05
Contents
TC_STRING - 0x74
newHandle 0x00 7e 00 00
Length - 4 - 0x00 04
Value - ABCD - 0x41424344
TC_NULL - 0x70
TC_REFERENCE - 0x71
Handle - 8257536 - 0x00 7e 00 00
To modify the string value from ABCD
to AAAABBBB
we must update the hex-ascii values for both the string length and the string value as follows:
STREAM_MAGIC - 0xac ed
STREAM_VERSION - 0x00 05
Contents
TC_STRING - 0x74
newHandle 0x00 7e 00 00
Length - 4 - 0x00 08
Value - ABCD - 0x4141414142424242
TC_NULL - 0x70
TC_REFERENCE - 0x71
Handle - 8257536 - 0x00 7e 00 00
If we save this to the file dumped.txt
then we can rebuild the stream as follows:
$ java -jar SerializationDumper-v1.1.jar -b dumped.txt rebuilt.bin
The file rebuilt.bin
will now contain the raw bytes of the modified serialization stream. If we encode that file as hex-ascii we get the following:
aced000574000841414141424242427071007e0000
See the limitations section below for stream rebuilding limitations.
###Deserialization/Dump Mode
The tool cannot deserialize all Java serialized data streams and may not be fully compliant with the Java serialization specification. In particular, if the stream contains an externalContents element then it cannot be deserialized without using the original class. If you have something that cannot be dumped which does not include an externalContents
element then please get in touch with some sample data so I can look at producing a fix!
externalContents: If a class implements the interface java.io.Externalizable
then it can use the writeExternal
method to write custom data to the serialization stream. This data can only be parsed by the corresponding readExternal
method so it is not possible to read the data without access to the original class. Such classes will have the SC_EXTERNALIZABLE
flag set in the classDescFlags
field but they will not have the SC_BLOCKDATA
flag set.
###Serialization/Rebuild Mode The stream rebuild mode currently only operates on the hex-ascii encoded bytes from the dumped data. For that reason, changing the string "ABCD" to "AAAABBBB" won't have the desired effect of producing the bytes 0x4141414142424242 in the output file. A future update may improve this but for now you'll have to do your hex-ascii encoding of strings manually!
Length fields aren't updated automatically during stream rebuilding. This may be desirable or not, but if you modify a string value in a way that changes the length just be aware that you may also need to modify the length (hex-ascii) field accordingly. The same applies to arrays.
If the stream contains any TC_REFERENCE
elements and you modify it to remove an element that includes a newHandle
field then you may break the references in the stream unless you manually update them. Reference handles/IDs are incremental and start at 0x7e0000
so the first newHandle
field is reference by 0x7e0000
, the second by 0x7e0001
, and so on. If the first element with a newHandle
field is removed from the stream then any TC_REFERENCE
elements in the stream must be modified to refer to a handle value one less than what they originally referred to.
This tool was hacked together on the fly to support my own research but if you find the tool useful and have any bug reports or suggestions please get in touch either here or on Twitter (@NickstaDB).
Please include a sample of the data you were trying to dump when submitting bug reports, this makes it far easier for me to debug and work out what the problem is, cheers!