set environment variable in GDB from output of command

imaibou picture imaibou · Jan 11, 2016 · Viewed 7k times · Source

I am trying to exploit a buffer overflow in a challenge, the buffer gets it's value from an environment variable. In GDB I know that you can set environment variables using the command:

set environment username = test

However I need to pass the username variable special characters, so I need to do something like:

set environment username= $(echo -e '\xff\x4c......')

But that command doesn't get executed and the username variable contains literally what I wrote down, does anybody know a trick to pass special characters to an environment variable?

Answer

gavv picture gavv · Jan 11, 2016

Well, if you really need to do it from GDB, here is one example:

hello.c

#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>

int main(int argc, char** argv) {
    printf("argv[1]=%s\n", argv[1]);
    printf("VAR=%s\n", getenv("VAR"));
    return 0;
}

Example:

$ gcc -g -o hello hello.c
$ gdb ./hello
...
(gdb) set exec-wrapper bash -c 'exec env VAR="`echo myEnv`" "$@"' --
(gdb) r myArg
...
argv[1]=myArg
VAR=myEnv

Change VAR and echo myEnv to a variable and command you need.


But note that setting VAR from shell before starting GDB also works:

$ VAR=`echo Hey there` gdb ./hello
...
(gdb) r myArg
...
argv[1]=myArg
VAR=Hey there