165 lines
6.1 KiB
YAML
165 lines
6.1 KiB
YAML
#
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# This spec describes the format of Atomic Red Team atomic tests that are defined in YAML format.
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#
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# The directory structure is:
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# - These tests reside in the `atomics` directory
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# - One directory per ATT&CK technique, named "t1234"
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# - All the atomic tests for a technique in a file called "t1234.yaml" inside that directory
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# - Any payloads, supporting materials, etc for the atomic tests also live in that directory
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#
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# For example:
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#
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# atomic-red-team/
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# atomic-red-team/atomics
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# atomic-red-team/atomics/t1234
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# atomic-red-team/atomics/t1234/t1234.yaml <-- this is where all the atomic tests live
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# atomic-red-team/atomics/t1234/payload1.sct <-- a payload file needed by one of the T1234 atomics
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# atomic-red-team/atomics/t1234/payload2.dll <-- another payload file needed by one of the T1234 atomics
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#
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# In general, a set of atomic tests for a technique should never depend on payloads
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# or supporting files from other atomic directories. We want to keep things nice and close.
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# Use git symlinks if you really need to share files between techniques.
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#
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# To validate your atomics, run `atomic-red-team/validate_atomics.rb`
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---
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attack_technique: TXXXX # (with a capital T, Example: 'T1123')
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display_name: Name of the technique as defined by ATT&CK. # Example: 'Audio Capture'
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# `atomic_tests` is an array of distinct test cases inside this technique. A test case should
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# include ALL of the information needed to run that test (ie, this is the "atomic" - you don't
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# distribute steps across different atomics)
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# Each of these tests is a YAML array element (starts with a `-`).
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atomic_tests:
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#
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# This is the first atomic test
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#
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- name: Short name of the test that titles how it tests the technique. # Example: "SourceRecorder via cmd.exe"
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description: |
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Long form description of the test. Markdown is supported so you can **bold** items, create
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- one list
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- two list
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- red list
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- [blue list](https://google.com)
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# supported platforms is an array of the OS/platforms this atomic test can be run upon. Values include:
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# - windows
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# - macos
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# - centos
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# - ubuntu
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# - linux
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supported_platforms:
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- windows
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# inputs to the atomic test that are required to run the test (think of these like function arguments).
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# This is a hash where the key is the input name, value is a hash defining the input argument.
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input_arguments:
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# this is the first input argument, called "output_file"
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output_file:
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# Short description of the input argument
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description: xxxxx
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# data type of the input. Possible values could include:
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# - Path (a file path)
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# - Url (a URL)
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# - String
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# - Integer
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# - Float
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# - really anything else you'd like, but add it to this list
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type: Path
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# default value for this argument that will be used if one is not specifid
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default: test.wma
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# this is a example of a second argument
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malware_payload_url:
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description: xxxxx
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type: Url
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default: 0000:00:30
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# a list of executors that can execute this atomic test. There are almost always going to be one of these
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# per test, but there are cases where you may have multiple - for example, separate executors for `sh`
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# and `bash` when working on linux OSes.
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executors:
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# the name of the executor describes the framework or application in which the test should be executed.
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#
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# Each of these executors will have options that the executor needs to run. Possible executors we've imagined
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# at this time and their required options include:
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#
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# - `command_prompt` : The Windows Command Prompt, aka cmd.exe
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# Requires the "command" option that is a multi-line script that will be preprocessed and
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# then executed by cmd.exe
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#
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# Example:
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# - name: command_prompt
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# command: |
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# echo "attack starting"
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# echo "running command 1: this is the value of the FOOBAR input_argument: #{FOOBAR}"
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#
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# - `powershell` : Powershell
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# Requires the "`command`" option that is a multi-line script that will be preprocessed and
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# then executed by cmd.exe
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#
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# Example:
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# - name: powershell
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# command: |
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# Write-Debug "attack starting"
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# Write-Debug "running command 1: this is the value of the FOOBAR input_argument: #{FOOBAR}"
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#
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# - `sh` : Linux's bourne shell
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# Requires the "`command`" option that is a multi-line script that will be preprocessed and
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# then executed by cmd.exe
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#
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# Example:
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# - name: sh
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# command: |
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# echo "attack starting"
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# echo "running command 1: this is the value of the FOOBAR input_argument: #{FOOBAR}"
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#
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# - `bash` : Linux's bourne again shell
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# Requires the "`command`" option that is a multi-line script that will be preprocessed and
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# then executed by cmd.exe
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#
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# Example:
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# - name: bash
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# command: |
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# echo "attack starting"
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# echo "running command 1: this is the value of the FOOBAR input_argument: #{FOOBAR}"
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#
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# - `manual` : a list of manual steps to run. This is most often used when GUI steps are involved that
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# cannot be automated.
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#
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# Requires the `steps` option that tells the user what to do to invoke the test. This is a
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# multi-line list of instructions (also preprocessed)
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#
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# Example:
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# - name: manual
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# steps: |
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# 1. Navigate to [chrome://extensions](chrome://extensions) and
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# tick 'Developer Mode'.
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#
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# 2. Click 'Load unpacked extension...' and navigate to
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# [Browser_Extension](../t1176/)
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#
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# 3. Click the '#{FOOBAR}' button - you can interpolate here too!
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#
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- name: command_prompt
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command: |
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SoundRecorder /FILE #{output_file} /DURATION #{duration_hms}
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#
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# This is the second atomic test
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#
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- name: Echo to the screen
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description: |
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blah blah blah
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supported_platforms:
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- macos
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- centos
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- ubuntu
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# in this example we have no input arguments
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input_arguments:
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executors:
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- name: bash
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command: echo "Hello world!"
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