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MalDiv

Authors

  • Mathias Payer [email protected]
  • Stefan Brunthaler
  • Per Larsen
  • Stephen Crane
  • Richard Wartell
  • Michael Franz

Abstract

Signature-based similarity metrics are the primary mechanism to detect malware on current systems. Each file is scanned and compared against a set of signatures. This approach has several problems: (i) all possible detectable malware must have a signature in the database and (ii) it might take a substantial amount of time between initial spread of the malware and the time anti-malware companies generate a signature to protect from the malware.

On the other hand, the malware landscape is changing: there are only few malware families alive at a certain point in time. Each family evolves along a common software update and maintenance cycle. Individual malware instances are repacked or obfuscated whenever they are detected by a large set of anti-malware products, basically resulting in an arms race between malware authors and anti-malware products.

Anti-malware products are not efficient if they follow this arms race and we show how it is possible to maximize the advantage for malware distributors. We present MalDiv, an automatic diversification mechanism that uses compiler-based transformations to generate an almost infinite amount of binaries with the same functionality but very low similarity, resulting in different signatures. Malware diversity builds on software diversity and uses open decisions in the compiler to reorder and change code and data. In addition, static data is encrypted using a set of transformations. Such a tool allows malware distributors to generate an almost unlimited amount of binaries that cannot be detected using signature-based matching.

Contents

The following subdirectories and files are in this repository:

  • README.md: you guessed it
  • INSTALL: use this file to build a diversifying LLVM and clang
  • src: will keep the sources for the LLVM and clang compiler
  • bin: will keep the compiled binaries
  • test: contains a set of simple examples, test cases, and analysis scripts
  • paper: contains both the SyScan and the arXiv paper (and sources)
  • presentation: contains the two MalDiv presentations