A utility to recursively map the structure of a file.
Reason this release was yanked:
Kaitai defs were not packaged correctly
Project description
PolyFile
A utility to identify and map the semantic structure of files, including polyglots, chimeras, and schizophrenic files. It can be used in conjunction with its sister tool PolyTracker for Automated Lexical Annotation and Navigation of Parsers, a backronym devised solely for the purpose of collectively referring to the tools as The ALAN Parsers Project.
Quickstart
You can install the latest stable version of PolyFile from PyPI:
pip3 install polyfile
To install PolyFile from source, in the same directory as this README, run:
pip3 install -e .
This will automatically install the polyfile
and polymerge
executables in your path.
Usage
usage: polyfile [-h] [--filetype FILETYPE] [--list] [--html HTML]
[--try-all-offsets] [--only-match] [--debug] [--quiet]
[--version] [-dumpversion]
[FILE]
A utility to recursively map the structure of a file.
positional arguments:
FILE The file to analyze; pass '-' or omit to read from
STDIN
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--filetype FILETYPE, -f FILETYPE
Explicitly match against the given filetype (default
is to match against all filetypes)
--list, -l list the supported filetypes (for the `--filetype`
argument) and exit
--html HTML, -t HTML Path to write an interactive HTML file for exploring
the PDF
--try-all-offsets, -a
Search for a file match at every possible offset; this
can be very slow for larger files
--only-match, -m Do not attempt to parse known filetypes; only match
against file magic
--debug, -d Print debug information
--quiet, -q Suppress all log output (overrides --debug)
--version, -v Print PolyFile's version information to STDERR
-dumpversion Print PolyFile's raw version information to STDOUT and
exit
To generate a JSON mapping of a file, run:
polyfile INPUT_FILE > output.json
You can optionally have PolyFile output an interactive HTML page containing a labeled, interactive hexdump of the file:
polyfile INPUT_FILE --html output.html > output.json
File Support
PolyFile has a cleanroom, pure Python implementation of the libmagic file classifier, and supports all 263 MIME types that it can identify.
It currently has support for parsing and semantically mapping the following formats:
- PDF, using an instrumented version of Didier Stevens' public domain, permissive, forensic parser
- ZIP, including reursive identification of all ZIP contents
- JPEG/JFIF, using its Kaitai Struct grammar
- iNES
- Any other format specified in a KSY grammar
For an example that exercises all of these file formats, run:
curl -v --silent https://www.sultanik.com/files/ESultanikResume.pdf | polyfile --html ESultanikResume.html - > ESultanikResume.json
Prior to PolyFile version 0.3.0, it used the TrID database for file identificaiton rather than the libmagic file definitions. This proved to be very slow (since TrID has many duplicate entries) and prone to false positives (since TrID's file definitions are much simpler than libmagic's). The original TrID matching code is still shipped with PolyFile and can be invoked programmatically, but it is not used by default.
Output Format
PolyFile outputs its mapping in an extension of the SBuD JSON format described in the documentation.
libMagic Implementation
PolyFile has a cleanroom implementation of libmagic (used in the file
command).
It can be invoked programmatically by running:
from polyfile.magic import MagicMatcher
with open("file_to_test", "rb") as f:
# the default instance automatically loads all file definitions
for match in MagicMatcher.DEFAULT_INSTANCE.match(f.read()):
for mimetype in match.mimetypes:
print(f"Matched MIME: {mimetype}")
print(f"Match string: {match!s}")
To load a specific or custom file definition:
list_of_paths_to_definitions = ["def1", "def2"]
matcher = MagicMatcher.parse(*list_of_paths_to_definitions)
with open("file_to_test", "rb") as f:
for match in matcher.match(f.read()):
...
Merging Output From PolyTracker
PolyTracker is PolyFile’s sister utility for automatically instrumenting a parser to track the input byte offsets operated on by each function. The output of both tools can be merged to automatically label the semantic purpose of the functions in a parser. For example, given an instrumented black-box binary, we can quickly determine which functions in the program are responsible for parsing which parts of the input file format’s grammar. This is an area of active research intended to achieve fully automated grammar extraction from a parser.
A separate utility called polymerge
is installed with PolyFile specifically designed to merge the output of both
tools.
usage: polyfile [-h] [--filetype FILETYPE] [--list] [--html HTML]
[--only-match-mime] [--only-match] [--require-match]
[--max-matches MAX_MATCHES] [--debug] [--trace] [--quiet]
[--version] [-dumpversion]
[FILE]
A utility to recursively map the structure of a file.
positional arguments:
FILE the file to analyze; pass '-' or omit to read from
STDIN
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--filetype FILETYPE, -f FILETYPE
explicitly match against the given filetype or
filetype wildcard (default is to matchagainst all
filetypes)
--list, -l list the supported filetypes (for the `--filetype`
argument) and exit
--html HTML, -t HTML path to write an interactive HTML file for exploring
the PDF
--only-match-mime, -I
just print out the matching MIME types for the file,
one on each line
--only-match, -m do not attempt to parse known filetypes; only match
against file magic
--require-match if no matches are found, exit with code 127
--max-matches MAX_MATCHES
stop scanning after having found this many matches
--debug, -d print debug information
--trace, -dd print extra verbose debug information
--quiet, -q suppress all log output (overrides --debug)
--version, -v print PolyFile's version information to STDERR
-dumpversion print PolyFile's raw version information to STDOUT and
exit
The output of polymerge
is the same as PolyFile’s output format, augmented with the following:
- For each semantic label in the hierarchy, a list of…
- …functions that operated on bytes tainted with that label; and
- …functions whose control flow was influenced by bytes tainted with that label.
- For each type within the semantic hierarchy, a list of functions that are “most specialized” in processing that type. This process is described in the next section.
polymerge
can also optionally emit a Graphviz .dot
file or rendered PDF of the runtime control-flow graph recorded
by PolyTracker.
Identifying Function Specializations
As mentioned above, polymerge
attempts to match each semantic type of the input file to a set of functions that are
“most specialized” in operating on that type. This is an active area of academic research and is likely to change in
the future, but here is the current method employed by polymerge
:
- For each semantic type in the input file, collect the functions that operated on bytes from that type;
- For each function, calculate the Shannon entropy of the different types on which that function operated;
- Sort the functions by entropy, and select the functions in the smallest standard deviation; and
- Keep the functions that are shallowest in the dominator tree of the runtime control-flow graph.
License and Acknowledgements
This research was developed by Trail of Bits with funding from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) under the SafeDocs program as a subcontractor to Galois. It is licensed under the Apache 2.0 lisense. The PDF parser is modified from the parser developed by Didier Stevens and released into the public domain. © 2019, Trail of Bits.
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