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Extended Attributes - T1564.014 (762e6f29-a62f-4d96-91ed-d0073181431f)

Adversaries may abuse extended attributes (xattrs) on macOS and Linux to hide their malicious data in order to evade detection. Extended attributes are key-value pairs of file and directory metadata used by both macOS and Linux. They are not visible through standard tools like Finder, ls, or cat and require utilities such as xattr (macOS) or getfattr (Linux) for inspection. Operating systems and applications use xattrs for tagging, integrity checks, and access control. On Linux, xattrs are organized into namespaces such as user. (user permissions), trusted. (root permissions), security., and system., each with specific permissions. On macOS, xattrs are flat strings without namespace prefixes, commonly prefixed with com.apple.* (e.g., com.apple.quarantine, com.apple.metadata:_kMDItemUserTags) and used by system features like Gatekeeper and Spotlight.(Citation: Establishing persistence using extended attributes on Linux)

An adversary may leverage xattrs by embedding a second-stage payload into the extended attribute of a legitimate file. On macOS, a payload can be embedded into a custom attribute using the xattr command. A separate loader can retrieve the attribute with xattr -p, decode the content, and execute it using a scripting interpreter. On Linux, an adversary may use setfattr to write a payload into the user. namespace of a legitimate file. A loader script can later extract the payload with getfattr --only-values, decode it, and execute it using bash or another interpreter. In both cases, because the primary file content remains unchanged, security tools and integrity checks that do not inspect extended attributes will observe the original file hash, allowing the malicious payload to evade detection.(Citation: Low GroupIB xattrs nov 2024)

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Hide Artifacts - T1564 (22905430-4901-4c2a-84f6-98243cb173f8) Attack Pattern Extended Attributes - T1564.014 (762e6f29-a62f-4d96-91ed-d0073181431f) Attack Pattern 1