Due: Monday, 7 March, 2016 by 11:59:59 PM.
Programming assignments in CS 485G are individual work. You may discuss approaches with other students, but must figure out the solution to your bomb on your own.
The nefarious Dr. Evil has planted a slew of ``binary bombs'' on
our class machines. A binary bomb is a program that consists of a
sequence of phases. Each phase expects you to type a particular string
on stdin. If you type the correct string, then the phase is
defused and the bomb proceeds to the next phase. Otherwise, the
bomb explodes by printing "BOOM!!!"
and then
terminating. The bomb is defused when every phase has been defused.
There are too many bombs for us to deal with, so we are giving each student a bomb to defuse. Your mission, which you have no choice but to accept, is to defuse your bomb before the due date. Good luck, and welcome to the bomb squad!
You can obtain your bomb by pointing your Web browser at:
http://nmoor0.netlab.uky.edu:15213/
This will display a binary bomb request form for you to fill in. Enter your LinkBlue ID and your email address and hit the Submit button. The server will build your bomb and return it to your browser in a tar file called bombk.tar, where k is the unique number of your bomb.
Save the bombk.tar file to a (protected) directory
in which you plan to do your work. Then give the command:
tar -xvf bombk.tar
. This will create a directory called
./bombk with the following files:
If for some reason you request multiple bombs, this is not a problem. Choose one bomb to work on and delete the rest.
You must do the assignment on your class virtual machine. In fact, there is a rumor that Dr. Evil really is evil, and the bomb will always blow up if run elsewhere. There are several other tamper-proofing devices built into the bomb as well, or so we hear.
You can use many tools to help you defuse your bomb. Please look at the hints section for some tips and ideas. The best way is to use your favorite debugger to step through the disassembled binary.
Each time your bomb explodes it notifies the bomb server, and you lose 1/2 point (up to a max of 30 points) in the final score for the lab. So there are consequences to exploding the bomb. You must be careful!
The first four phases are worth 20 points each. Phases 5 and 6 are a little more difficult, and are worth 10 points each. So the maximum score you can get is 100 points.
Although phases get progressively harder to defuse, the expertise you gain as you move from phase to phase should offset this difficulty. However, the last phase will challenge even the best students, so please don't wait until the last minute to start.
The bomb ignores blank input lines. If you run your bomb with a command line argument, for example,
To avoid accidentally detonating the bomb, you will need to learn how to single-step through the assembly code and how to set breakpoints. You will also need to learn how to inspect both the registers and the memory states. One of the nice side-effects of doing the lab is that you will get very good at using a debugger. This is a crucial skill that will pay big dividends the rest of your career.
This is an individual project. All handins are electronic. Clarifications and corrections will be posted on the assignment web page:
http://www.cs.uky.edu/~neil/485/pa/2/
There is no explicit submission. The bomb will notify your instructor automatically about your progress as you work on it. You can keep track of how you are doing by looking at the class scoreboard at:
http://nmoor0.netlab.uky.edu:15213/scoreboard
This web page is updated continuously to show the progress for each bomb.
There are many ways of defusing your bomb. You can examine it in great detail without ever running the program, and figure out exactly what it does. This is a useful technique, but it not always easy to do. You can also run it under a debugger, watch what it does step by step, and use this information to defuse it. This is probably the fastest way of defusing it.
We do make one request, please do not use brute force! You could write a program that will try every possible key to find the right one. But this is no good for several reasons:
There are many tools which are designed to help you figure out both how programs work, and what is wrong when they don't work. Here is a list of some of the tools you may find useful in analyzing your bomb, and hints on how to use them.
The GNU debugger, this is a command line debugger tool available on virtually every platform. You can trace through a program line by line, examine memory and registers, look at both the source code and assembly code (we are not giving you the source code for most of your bomb), set breakpoints, set memory watch points, and write scripts.
The CS:APP web site
http://csapp.cs.cmu.edu/public/students.htmlhas a very handy single-page gdb summary that you can print out and use as a reference. Here are some other tips for using gdb.
This will print out the bomb's symbol table. The symbol table includes the names of all functions and global variables in the bomb, the names of all the functions the bomb calls, and their addresses. You may learn something by looking at the function names!
Use this to disassemble all of the code in the bomb. You can also just look at individual functions. Reading the assembler code can tell you how the bomb works.
Although objdump -d gives you a lot of information, it doesn't tell you the whole story. Calls to system-level functions are displayed in a cryptic form. For example, a call to sscanf might appear as:
8048c36: e8 99 fc ff ff call 80488d4 <_init+0x1a0>To determine that the call was to sscanf, you would need to disassemble within gdb.
This utility will display the printable strings in your bomb.
Looking for a particular tool? How about documentation? Don't forget, the commands apropos, man, and info are your friends. In particular, man ascii might come in useful. info gas will give you more than you ever wanted to know about the GNU Assembler. Also, the web may also be a treasure trove of information. If you get stumped, feel free to ask your instructor for help.
Any clarifications made after the assignment has been posted will appear here.
There are no clarifications yet.