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smss.exe
Session Manager.
Session 0 starts csrss.exe and wininit.exe (OS services) while Session 1 starts csrss.exe and winlogon.exe (User session). However, you should see only one process of that binary without children in the processes tree.
Also, sessions apart from 0 and 1 may mean that RDP sessions are occurring.
csrss.exe
Client/Server Run Subsystem Process.
It manages processes and threads, makes the Windows API available for other processes and also maps drive letters, create temp files, and handles the shutdown process.
There is one running in Session 0 and another one in Session 1 (so 2 processes in the processes tree). Another one is created per new Session.
winlogon.exe
Windows Logon Process.
It's responsible for user logon/logoffs. It launches logonui.exe to ask for username and password and then calls lsass.exe to verify them.
Then it launches userinit.exe which is specified in HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon
with key Userinit.
Mover over, the previous registry should have explorer.exe in the Shell key or it might be abused as a malware persistence method.
wininit.exe
Windows Initialization Process.
It launches services.exe, lsass.exe, and lsm.exe in Session 0. There should only be 1 process.
userinit.exe
Userinit Logon Application.
Loads the ntduser.dat in HKCU and initialises the user environment and runs logon scripts and GPO.
It launches explorer.exe.
lsm.exe
Local Session Manager.
It works with smss.exe to manipulate user sessions: Logon/logoff, shell start, lock/unlock desktop, etc.
After W7 lsm.exe was transformed into a service (lsm.dll).
There should only be 1 process in W7 and from them a service running the DLL.
services.exe
Service Control Manager.
It loads services configured as auto-start and drivers.
It's the parent process of svchost.exe, dllhost.exe, taskhost.exe, spoolsv.exe and many more.
Services are defined in HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services
and this process maintains a DB in memory of service info that can be queried by sc.exe.
Note how some services are going to be running in a process of their own and others are going to be sharing a svchost.exe process.
There should only be 1 process.
lsass.exe
Local Security Authority Subsystem.
It's responsible for the user authentication and create the security tokens. It uses authentication packages located in HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Lsa
.
It writes to the Security event log and there should only be 1 process.
Keep in mind that this process is highly attacked to dump passwords.
svchost.exe
Generic Service Host Process.
It hosts multiple DLL services in one shared process.
Usually, you will find that svchost.exe is launched with the -k
flag. This will launch a query to the registry HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Svchost where there will be a key with the argument mentioned in -k that will contain the services to launch in the same process.
For example: -k UnistackSvcGroup
will launch: PimIndexMaintenanceSvc MessagingService WpnUserService CDPUserSvc UnistoreSvc UserDataSvc OneSyncSvc
If the flag -s
is also used with an argument, then svchost is asked to only launch the specified service in this argument.
There will be several processes of svchost.exe
. If any of them is not using the -k
flag, then that's very suspicious. If you find that services.exe is not the parent, that's also very suspicious.
taskhost.exe
This process act as a host for processes running from DLLs. It also loads the services that are running from DLLs.
In W8 this is called taskhostex.exe and in W10 taskhostw.exe.
explorer.exe
This is the process responsible for the user's desktop and launching files via file extensions.
Only 1 process should be spawned per logged on user.
This is run from userinit.exe which should be terminated, so no parent should appear for this process.
Catching Malicious Processes
- Is it running from the expected path? (No Windows binaries run from temp location)
- Is it communicating with weird IPs?
- Check digital signatures (Microsoft artifacts should be signed)
- Is it spelled correctly?
- Is running under the expected SID?
- Is the parent process the expected one (if any)?
- Are the children processes the expecting ones? (no cmd.exe, wscript.exe, powershell.exe..?)
{% hint style="success" %}
Learn & practice AWS Hacking:HackTricks Training AWS Red Team Expert (ARTE)
Learn & practice GCP Hacking: HackTricks Training GCP Red Team Expert (GRTE)
Support HackTricks
- Check the subscription plans!
- Join the 💬 Discord group or the telegram group or follow us on Twitter 🐦 @hacktricks_live.
- Share hacking tricks by submitting PRs to the HackTricks and HackTricks Cloud github repos.