Converts PE so that it can be then injected just like a normal shellcode.
(At the same time, the output file remains to be a valid PE).
Supports both 32 and 64 bit PEs
Authors: @hasherezade & @hh86
Objective
The goal of this project is to provide a possibility to generate PE files that can be injected with minimal effort. It is inspired by Stephen Fewer's ReflectiveDLLInjection - but the difference is that with pe2shc you can add the reflective loading stub post-compilation. Also, the header of the PE file is modified in such a way, that you can start executing the injected buffer from the very beginning - just like you would do with a shellcode. It will automatically find the stub, and continue loading the full PE.
Scope of the project
- relocations
- imports
- TLS callbacks (called once, before the Entry Point is executed)
Please keep in mind, that although for the majority of PE files this is sufficient, some executables you encounter may be using other, more complex aspects of the PE format. It means, not every PE can be successfuly converted to a shellcode.
- exceptions (if the executable you converted will be run as a shellcode, and throw the exception, the appropriate exception handler will not be found, and the application will crash)
- Delay Load Imports (only the basic Import Table support is implemented)
- MUI files (if the executable you converted expects some elements of the GUI have to be loaded from a MUI file, it won't work)
Builds
Clone
Use recursive clone to get the repo together with all the submodules:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/hasherezade/pe_to_shellcode.git
How to use it
- Use pe2shc.exe to convert a PE of your choice:
pe2shc.exe <path to your PE> [output path*]
* - optional
If the PE was successfuly converted, pe2shc will let you know where the output was saved:
[+] Saved to file: <converted file>
i.e.
[+] Saved to file: test_file.shc.exe
- Use runshc.exe(*) to run the output file and check if the conversion went fine.
runshc.exe <converted file>
(*)Warning: remember to use the version of runshc with a bitness appropriate to your converted application (32 or 64 bit) - otherwise the application will crash!
- If the file runs as the original PE, it confirms that the conversion was successful!
Now you can use the converted PE just like you would use a shellcode: inject it to a target and execute from the beginning of the buffer. No additional PE loaders are required.
At the same time, you can keep using the converted file as a regular PE.