HookSafe Protects Kernel from Rootkits
A research group in the computer sciences faculty at North Carolina State University has written a prototype to prevent rootkits from manipulating kernel object hooks to do their damage.
The four researchers into the rootkit protector created and implemented a special virtualized system that defends against persistent rootkits that tamper with kernel execution. The system assembles specific function calls and messages, mirrors them in a shadow copy of the kernel hooks in a central location and protects them from hardware write access. To test their product, called HookSafe, the team let loose a few real rootkits and also measured the system load on the host system. The result showed highly effective protection with a mere 6% system slowdown.
The team found successful defense against, for example, the Adore-ng and Phalanx rootkits. Xuxian Jiang, one of the four team members, told Linux Pro Magazine that the HookSafe source code will probably be made public sometime in the future. Evidence from other projects of team members listed on the university's publication page makes this credible.
The team still recognizes two weaknesses of their system. The first is that it's based on so-called hook profiles that emerge from the dynamic analysis of the kernel hooks, a process they acknowledge as being far from perfect in that hook access points could be missed, resulting in protection gaps. A possible solution is either an improved dynamic analysis or a complementary process using static analysis. The second weakness is that HookSafe can only register attacks that it recognizes, so admins need to define the protective hooks ahead of time. The team intends to fix this by working together with projects such as HookFinder or its own HookMap predecessor product.
Peng Ning, Zhi Wang and Xuxian Jian of the state university have been working with Weidong Cui of Microsoft Research on the solution since September 2008 and want eventually to take HookSafe in the direction of operating system kernel protection. Their 10-page research paper developed out of the annual Security, Audit and Control (SIGSAC) working group conference of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) held in Chicago. The association has a worldwide membership of 100,000 from industry, research and the free software realm that grants the annual "computing Nobel Prize" known as the A. M. Turing Award.
Gallery (7 images) |
---|
Subscribe to our Linux Newsletters
Find Linux and Open Source Jobs
Subscribe to our ADMIN Newsletters
Support Our Work
Linux Magazine content is made possible with support from readers like you. Please consider contributing when you’ve found an article to be beneficial.
News
-
Gnome 48 Debuts New Audio Player
To date, the audio player found within the Gnome desktop has been meh at best, but with the upcoming release that all changes.
-
Plasma 6.3 Ready for Public Beta Testing
Plasma 6.3 will ship with KDE Gear 24.12.1 and KDE Frameworks 6.10, along with some new and exciting features.
-
Budgie 10.10 Scheduled for Q1 2025 with a Surprising Desktop Update
If Budgie is your desktop environment of choice, 2025 is going to be a great year for you.
-
Firefox 134 Offers Improvements for Linux Version
Fans of Linux and Firefox rejoice, as there's a new version available that includes some handy updates.
-
Serpent OS Arrives with a New Alpha Release
After months of silence, Ikey Doherty has released a new alpha for his Serpent OS.
-
HashiCorp Cofounder Unveils Ghostty, a Linux Terminal App
Ghostty is a new Linux terminal app that's fast, feature-rich, and offers a platform-native GUI while remaining cross-platform.
-
Fedora Asahi Remix 41 Available for Apple Silicon
If you have an Apple Silicon Mac and you're hoping to install Fedora, you're in luck because the latest release supports the M1 and M2 chips.
-
Systemd Fixes Bug While Facing New Challenger in GNU Shepherd
The systemd developers have fixed a really nasty bug amid the release of the new GNU Shepherd init system.
-
AlmaLinux 10.0 Beta Released
The AlmaLinux OS Foundation has announced the availability of AlmaLinux 10.0 Beta ("Purple Lion") for all supported devices with significant changes.
-
Gnome 47.2 Now Available
Gnome 47.2 is now available for general use but don't expect much in the way of newness, as this is all about improvements and bug fixes.