Asi detecting-t1548-abuse-elevation-control-mechanism
Detect abuse of elevation control mechanisms including UAC bypass, sudo exploitation, and setuid/setgid manipulation by monitoring registry modifications, process elevation flags, and unusual parent-child process relationships.
install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/plurigrid/asi
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/plurigrid/asi "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/plugins/asi/skills/detecting-t1548-abuse-elevation-control-mechanism" ~/.claude/skills/plurigrid-asi-detecting-t1548-abuse-elevation-control-mechanism && rm -rf "$T"
manifest:
plugins/asi/skills/detecting-t1548-abuse-elevation-control-mechanism/SKILL.mdsource content
Detecting T1548 Abuse Elevation Control Mechanism
When to Use
- When hunting for privilege escalation via UAC bypass in Windows environments
- After threat intelligence indicates use of UAC bypass exploits by active threat groups
- When investigating how attackers achieved administrative access without triggering UAC prompts
- During security assessments to validate UAC bypass detection coverage
- When monitoring for setuid/setgid abuse on Linux systems
Prerequisites
- Sysmon Event ID 1 with command-line and parent process logging
- Windows Security Event ID 4688 with process tracking
- Registry auditing for UAC-related keys (HKCU\Software\Classes)
- Sysmon Event ID 12/13 (Registry key/value modification)
- EDR with elevation monitoring capabilities
Workflow
- Monitor UAC Registry Modifications: Many UAC bypasses modify registry keys under
orHKCU\Software\Classes\ms-settings\shell\open\command
. Track Sysmon Events 12/13 for these changes.HKCU\Software\Classes\mscfile\shell\open\command - Detect Auto-Elevating Process Abuse: Certain Windows binaries auto-elevate without UAC prompts (fodhelper.exe, computerdefaults.exe, eventvwr.exe). Hunt for these being launched by non-standard parent processes.
- Track Process Integrity Level Changes: Monitor for processes escalating from medium to high integrity level without corresponding UAC consent events.
- Hunt for Elevated Process Spawning: Detect when auto-elevating processes spawn unexpected children (cmd.exe, powershell.exe) -- indicating UAC bypass exploitation.
- Monitor Linux Elevation Abuse: Track sudo misconfiguration exploitation, setuid binary abuse, and capability manipulation.
- Correlate with Privilege Escalation Chain: Map elevation abuse to the broader attack chain, identifying what was done with escalated privileges.
Key Concepts
| Concept | Description |
|---|---|
| T1548.002 | Bypass User Account Control |
| T1548.001 | Setuid and Setgid (Linux) |
| T1548.003 | Sudo and Sudo Caching |
| T1548.004 | Elevated Execution with Prompt (macOS) |
| UAC Auto-Elevation | Windows binaries that elevate without prompt |
| fodhelper.exe | Common UAC bypass vector via registry hijack |
| eventvwr.exe | MSC file handler UAC bypass |
| Integrity Level | Windows process trust level (Low/Medium/High/System) |
Detection Queries
Splunk -- UAC Bypass via Registry Modification
index=sysmon (EventCode=12 OR EventCode=13) | where match(TargetObject, "(?i)HKCU\\\\Software\\\\Classes\\\\(ms-settings|mscfile|exefile|Folder)\\\\shell\\\\open\\\\command") | table _time Computer User EventCode TargetObject Details Image
Splunk -- Auto-Elevating Process Abuse
index=sysmon EventCode=1 | where match(Image, "(?i)(fodhelper|computerdefaults|eventvwr|sdclt|slui|cmstp)\.exe$") | where NOT match(ParentImage, "(?i)(explorer|svchost|services)\.exe$") | table _time Computer User Image CommandLine ParentImage ParentCommandLine
KQL -- UAC Bypass Detection
DeviceRegistryEvents | where Timestamp > ago(7d) | where RegistryKey has_any ("ms-settings\\shell\\open\\command", "mscfile\\shell\\open\\command") | where ActionType == "RegistryValueSet" | project Timestamp, DeviceName, RegistryKey, RegistryValueData, InitiatingProcessFileName
Sigma Rule
title: UAC Bypass via Registry Modification status: stable logsource: product: windows category: registry_set detection: selection: TargetObject|contains: - '\ms-settings\shell\open\command' - '\mscfile\shell\open\command' - '\exefile\shell\open\command' condition: selection level: high tags: - attack.privilege_escalation - attack.t1548.002
Common Scenarios
- fodhelper.exe Registry Hijack: Attacker sets
to a malicious executable, then launches fodhelper.exe which auto-elevates and executes the hijacked command.HKCU\Software\Classes\ms-settings\shell\open\command - eventvwr.exe MSC Bypass: Modifying
to intercept Event Viewer's auto-elevation behavior.HKCU\Software\Classes\mscfile\shell\open\command - sdclt.exe Bypass: Leveraging the Windows Backup utility's auto-elevation to execute arbitrary commands.
- CMSTP.exe INF Bypass: Using Connection Manager Profile Installer with a malicious INF file to bypass UAC via
flags./s /ni - DLL Hijacking in Auto-Elevate: Placing malicious DLLs in search paths of auto-elevating executables.
Output Format
Hunt ID: TH-UAC-[DATE]-[SEQ] Host: [Hostname] Bypass Method: [Registry hijack/DLL hijack/Token manipulation] Auto-Elevate Binary: [fodhelper.exe/eventvwr.exe/etc.] Registry Key Modified: [Full registry path] Payload Executed: [Command or binary path] User Context: [Account] Risk Level: [Critical/High/Medium] ATT&CK Technique: [T1548.00x]