Rather than heavily protecting backdoors with hardcore packers, many
malware authors evade heuristic detections by obfuscating only key
portions of an executable. Often, these portions are strings and resources
used to configure domains, files, and other artifacts of an infection.
These key features will not show up as plaintext in the output of the strings.exe
utility
that we commonly use during basic static analysis.
The FLARE Obfuscated String Solver (FLOSS, formerly FireEye Labs Obfuscated String Solver) uses advanced
static analysis techniques to automatically deobfuscate strings from
malware binaries. You can use it just like strings.exe
to enhance the
basic static analysis of unknown binaries.
FLOSS extracts all the following string types:
- static strings: "regular" ASCII and UTF-16LE strings
- stack strings: strings constructed on the stack at run-time
- tight strings: a special form of stack strings, decoded on the stack
- decoded strings: strings decoded in a function
Please review the theory behind FLOSS here.
Our blog post talks more about the motivation behind FLOSS and details how the tool works.
FLOSS version 2.0 updates are detailed in this blog post.
To try FLOSS right away, download a standalone executable file from the releases page: https://github.com/mandiant/flare-floss/releases
For a detailed description of installing FLOSS, review the documentation here.
Extract obfuscated strings from a malware binary:
$ floss /path/to/malware/binary
Display the help/usage screen to see all available switches.
$ floss -h
For a detailed description of using FLOSS, review the documentation here.
For a detailed description of testing FLOSS, review the documentation here.
FLOSS also contains additional Python scripts in the scripts folder which can be used to load its output into other tools such as Binary Ninja or IDA Pro. For detailed description of these scripts review the documentation here.