Vault7: CIA Hacking Tools Revealed
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Debugging a VMWare Guest
Prerequisites:
- VMWare (Workstation 6+ | Fusion)
- gdb (Pro tip: Use this .gdbinit unless you hate sane output and actual debugging context)
Steps:
- With the target guest VMVirtual Machine powered off, edit the .vmx file for the guest and add in the following lines:
#start the VMWare gdb listener on localhost
debugStub.listen.guest32 = "TRUE"#enable the gdb remote listener (so we can debug from another VMVirtual Machine or machine)
debugStub.listen.guest32.remote = "TRUE#uncomment below if you want to start debugging in the VMWare BIOS
#monitor.debugOnStartGuest32 = "TRUE"#Uncomment to enable int 3 breakpoints. Otherwise the gdb breakpoints will use hw breakpoints.
#debugStub.hideBreakpoints = "FALSE"
Note that there is also 64-bit support, just replace 32 with 64 in the above options.
Start up gdb either on you host, from another VMVirtual Machine on your host or from a remote machine.
$ gdb
Set your architecture (modern versions of gdb will tab complete all the supported options). If you're debugging 16-bit bootcode be sure to set this to i8086 otherwise your disassembly output will be wrong.
gdb$ set architecture i386
- Optionally, set your initial breakpoint. For example if you're debugging a bootloader you'd do the following:
gdb$ b *0x7c00
- Finally, tell gdb that you're debugging a remote target. If you're debugging from a remote machine or other VMVirtual Machine on the host. Use the host's IP instead of localhost. Also if your targeting a 64-bit guest, the port is 8864
gdb$ target remote localhost:8832
- Start the target VMWare guest.
- gdb should break on your breakpoint (or if you enabled
monitor.debugOnStartGuest32
in step one, gdb will be in the first instruction of the BIOSBasic Input/Output System). - From here you can debug as you would anything else in gdb.
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