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A .NET Runtime for Cobalt Strike's Beacon Object Files

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BOF.NET - A .NET Runtime for Cobalt Strike's Beacon Object Files

Introduction

BOF.NET is a small native BOF object combined with the BOF.NET managed runtime that enables the development of Cobalt Strike BOFs directly in .NET. BOF.NET removes the complexity of native compilation along with the headaches of manually importing native API. Testing BOF.NET assemblies is also generally much easier, since the .NET assemblies can be debugged using a traditional managed debugger.

Cobalt Strike Compatibility

BOF.NET versions 1.1.3 and below are compatible with Cobalt Strike 4.8 and below. BOF.NET version 1.2.0+ are compatible with version 4.9+ since the Beacon API's BeaconGetValue and BeaconAddValue are now used.

Getting started

Implementing you first BOF.NET class is simple. Add a reference to the BOF.NET runtime DLL from the BOFNET NuGet package and create a class that inherits from BeaconObject. A mandatory constructor with a BeaconApi object as the only parameter is needed. This should be passed along to the BeaconObject base constructor.

Finally override the Go function. Arguments will be pre-processed for you exactly how a Main function behaves inside a normal .NET assembly.

namespace BOFNET.Bofs {
    public class HelloWorld : BeaconObject {
        public HelloWorld(BeaconApi api) : base(api) { }
        public override void Go(string[] args) {
            BeaconConsole.WriteLine($"[+] Welcome to BOF.NET { (args.Length > 0 ? args[0] : "anonymous" )}");
        }
    }
}

Once you have compiled your BOF.NET assembly, download the .nupkg from the releases page or nuget.org. Open the package in your favorite zip application and extract the contents of the lib folder. Move the BOFNET.DLL from your preferred target framework folder into the same folder as the .cna and BOF obj files. The final structre should look like this.

.
+--
|  +-- BOFNET.dll
|  +-- bofnet.cna
|  +-- bofnet_execute.cpp.x86.obj
|  +-- bofnet_execute.cpp.x64.obj 

Load the bofnet.cna aggresor script into Cobalt Strike and being using your BOF.NET class.

Before any BOF.NET class can be used, the BOF.NET runtime needs to be initialised within the beacon instance.

bofnet_init

Once the runtime has loaded, you can proceed to load further .NET assemblies including other BOF.NET classes. BOF.NET now chunks the loading of Assemblies, therefore large assemblies can also be loaded (1M+)

bofnet_load /path/to/bofnet/HelloWorld.dll

You can confirm the library has been loaded using the bofnet_listassemblies alias. A complete list of classes that implmements BeaconObject can be shows by executing the bofnet_list alias.

Finally, once you have confirmed your assembly is loaded and the BOF.NET class is available you can execute it

bofnet_execute BOFNET.Bofs.HelloWorld @_EthicalChaos_

You can also use the shorthand method of just the class name, but this will only work if there is only one BOF.NET class present with that name.

bofnet_execute HelloWorld @_EthicalChaos_

Cobalt Strike Client Integrations

The BeaconObject class implements functionality to allow custom implementations of screen capture, file downloads (from memory 😊), keylogger and hash dumps. If, for example, the built in keylogger or screen capture implementation is causing Windows Defender or other AV engines to kill your beacon, you can implement your own. The relevant functions are documented below.

void SendScreenShot(byte[] jpgData, int session, string userName, string title)
  • jpgData Raw JPEG image data.
  • session User session id the screen capture was taken from.
  • userName The user name running under the session.
  • title The title of the window to name for the screen shot.
SendKeystrokes(string keys, int session, string userName, string title)
  • keys The sequence of keys captured.
  • session User session id the screen capture was taken from.
  • userName The user name running under the session.
  • title The title of the window to application the keys were captured from.
DownloadFile(string fileName, Stream fileData)
  • fileName The file name to use for the metadata within beacon.
  • fileData A readable stream that will be used for the file content.

DownloadFile will lock beacon and become unresponsive until the download completes!

SendHashes(UserHash[] userHashes)
  • userHashes A collection of usernames that have been captured.

Beacon Command Reference

Command Description
bofnet_init Initialises the BOF.NET runtime inside the beacon process
bofnet_list List's all executable BOF.NET classes
bofnet_listassembiles List assemblies currently loaded into the BOF.NET runtime
bofnet_execute bof_name [args] Execute a BOF.NET class, supplying optional arguments
bofnet_load assembly_path Load an additional .NET assembly from memory into the BOF.NET runtime.
bofnet_shutdown Shutdown the BOF.NET runtime
bofnet_job bof_name [args] Execute a BOF.NET class as a background job (thread)
bofnet_jobs List all currently active BOF.NET jobs
bofnet_jobstatus job_id Dump any pending console buffer from the background job
bofnet_jobkill job_id Dump any pending console buffer from the background job then kill it. Warning, can cause deadlocks when terminating a thread that have transitioned into native code
bofnet_boo booscript.boo Compile and execute Boo script in seperate temporary AppDomain
bofnet_vfs_add local_path vfs_filename content_type Add a file from the operator machine and store inside the BOFNET VFS

Built-in BOFS

VFS

Introduces the concept of a basic in-memory file/blob store. Other BOF's, like the WebServer BOF can use this for hosting in memory files.

Examples

Add a file to the BOF.NET VFS and store as the application/octet-stream MIME type

bofnet_vfs_add c:\tools\BOFNET.dll BOFNET.dll application/octet-stream 

List all files inside the VFS

bofnet_execute VFS list

Download the file BOFNET.dll stored inside the VFS

bofnet_execute VFS download BOFNET.dll

Screenshot

Does what it says on the tin, simple screenshot functionality

WebServer

Hosts an in-memory web server leveraging Microsoft's HTTP Server API. Files stored inside the BOF.NET VFS are hosted by the web server.

Example

bofnet_job HttpServer http://localhost:1337/

WebServer

Caveats

Depending on the target operating system will depend on which distribution should be used (net35/net40). The runtime will attempt to create a .NET v4 CLR using the CLRCreateInstance function that was made available as part of .NET v4. If the function cannot be found, the older mechanism is used to initialise .NET v2. Currently the native component cannot determine which managed runtime to load dynamically, so make sure you use the correct distribution folder. A fully up to date Windows 7 will generally have .NET 4 installed, so on most occasions you will need the net461 folder from inside the dist folder. Older operating systems like XP will depend on what is installed.

BOF.NET will follow the same restrictions as it's native BOF counterpart. Execution of a BOF.NET class internally uses the inline_execute functionality. Therefore, any BOF.NET invocations will block beacon until it finishes.

BOF.NET does have the added benefit that loaded assemblies remain persistent. This facilitates the use of threads within your BOF.NET class without the worry of the assembly being unloaded after the Go function finishes. But you cannot write to the beacon console or use any other beacon BOF API's since these are long gone and released by Cobalt Strike after the BOF returns.

If you want to execute your BOF.NET class as a background job using a thread, use the bofnet_job command. This wraps the invocation in a separate thread and handles BeaconConsole writes transparently for you. Be careful with long running jobs and lots of console output, since the console buffer will cached until a call to bofnet_jobstatus is invoked.

How BOF.NET Works?

BOF.NET contains a small native BOF that acts as a bridge into the managed world. When bofnet_init is called, this will start the managed CLR runtime within the process that beacon is running from. Once the CLR is started, a separate .NET AppDomain is created to host all assemblies loaded by BOF.NET. Following on from this, the BOF.NET runtime assembly is loaded into the AppDomain from memory to facilitate the remaining features of BOF.NET. No .NET assemblies are loaded from disk.

All future BOF.NET calls from here on out are typically handled by the InvokeBof method from the BOFNET.Runtime class. This keeps the native BOF code small and concise and pushes all runtime logic into the managed BOF.NET runtime.

Building

BOF.NET uses the CMake build system along with MinGW GCC compiler for generating BOF files and uses the .NET core msbuild project type for building the managed runtime. So prior to building, all these prerequisites need to be satisfied and available on the PATH.

From the root of the checkout directory, issue the following commands:

Windows

mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=MinSizeRel -G "MinGW Makefiles" ..
cmake --build .
cmake --install .

Linux

On Linux we utilise a CMake toolchain file to cross compile the native BOF object using the mingw compiler. For the managed component, please make sure the dotnet command line tool is also installed from .NET core

mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$PWD/install -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=MinSizeRel -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=../toolchain/Linux-mingw64.cmake ..
cmake --build .
cmake --install .

Docker

If you'd rather build using a docker image on Linux with all the build dependencies pre installed, you can use the ccob/windows_cross image.

docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd):/root/bofnet ccob/windows_cross:latest /bin/bash -c "cd /root/bofnet; mkdir build; cd build; cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$PWD/install -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=MinSizeRel -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=../toolchain/Linux-mingw64.cmake ..; cmake --build .; cmake --install ."

Once the steps are complete, the build\dist folder should contain the artifacts of the build and should be ready to use within Cobalt Strike

References

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