<policy user="nobody"> <allow own="com.vulnerable.Service"/> <allow send_destination="com.vulnerable.Service"/> </policy> If the policy is too permissive (e.g., allow user="*" ), any unprivileged local user can interact with a root-owned service. Before writing exploits, you need reconnaissance. The standard tool is busctl (from systemd) or the older gdbus . Silent Reconnaissance As an unprivileged user, you can list all services on the system bus without any authentication:
# Introspect the Bluetooth adapter introspection = await bus.introspect('org.bluez', '/org/bluez/hci0') dbus-1.0 exploit
If the service does: sprintf(command, "rsync -av %s %s:/backup/", source_path, dest_host) An attacker sends: source_path = "/etc/shadow; id" (type STRING ) and dest_host = "localhost" . <policy user="nobody"> <allow own="com
Next time you land a low-privilege shell on a Linux machine, don’t run linpeas immediately. Instead, run busctl list and ask yourself: Which of these services trusts me more than it should? The answer might just be your golden ticket. Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only. Always obtain explicit permission before testing any system. Silent Reconnaissance As an unprivileged user, you can
To see who can talk to a service, inspect its policy: