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Ce document décrit un type de résultat de menace dans Security Command Center. Les résultats de menace sont générés par les détecteurs de menaces lorsqu'ils détectent une menace potentielle dans vos ressources cloud. Pour obtenir la liste complète des résultats de menace disponibles, consultez l'index des résultats de menace.
Présentation
Un processus a commencé par une redirection de flux vers un socket connecté distant. La génération d'une interface système connectée au réseau peut permettre à un pirate informatique d'effectuer des actions arbitraires après une compromission initiale limitée.
Comment répondre
Pour répondre à ce résultat, procédez comme suit :
Étape 1 : Examiner les détails du résultat
Ouvrez un résultat Reverse Shell comme indiqué dans la section Examiner les résultats. Le panneau d'informations sur le résultat s'ouvre sur l'onglet Résumé.
Dans l'onglet Récapitulatif, examinez les informations des sections suivantes :
Ce qui a été détecté, en particulier les champs suivants :
Binaire du programme : chemin d'accès absolu du processus, qui a commencé par la redirection du flux vers un socket distant.
Arguments : arguments fournis lors de l'appel du binaire du processus.
Ressource concernée, en particulier les champs suivants :
Vérifiez la valeur de hachage SHA-256 du fichier binaire signalé comme malveillant sur VirusTotal en cliquant sur le lien dans l'indicateur VirusTotal. VirusTotal est un service appartenant à Alphabet qui fournit du contexte sur les fichiers, URL, domaines et adresses IP potentiellement malveillants.
Pour élaborer un plan d'intervention, combinez les résultats de vos enquêtes avec les recherches MITRE et l'analyse VirusTotal.
Étape 7 : Mettre en œuvre votre réponse
Le plan de réponse suivant peut être adapté à ce résultat, mais peut également avoir une incidence sur les opérations.
Évaluez soigneusement les informations que vous collectez dans votre enquête pour déterminer la meilleure façon de solutionner les menaces détectées.
Contactez le propriétaire du projet contenant le conteneur compromis.
Sauf indication contraire, le contenu de cette page est régi par une licence Creative Commons Attribution 4.0, et les échantillons de code sont régis par une licence Apache 2.0. Pour en savoir plus, consultez les Règles du site Google Developers. Java est une marque déposée d'Oracle et/ou de ses sociétés affiliées.
Dernière mise à jour le 2025/09/05 (UTC).
[[["Facile à comprendre","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["J'ai pu résoudre mon problème","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Autre","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Difficile à comprendre","hardToUnderstand","thumb-down"],["Informations ou exemple de code incorrects","incorrectInformationOrSampleCode","thumb-down"],["Il n'y a pas l'information/les exemples dont j'ai besoin","missingTheInformationSamplesINeed","thumb-down"],["Problème de traduction","translationIssue","thumb-down"],["Autre","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["Dernière mise à jour le 2025/09/05 (UTC)."],[],[],null,["| Premium and Enterprise [service tiers](/security-command-center/docs/service-tiers)\n\nThis document describes a threat finding type in Security Command Center. Threat findings are generated by\n[threat detectors](/security-command-center/docs/concepts-security-sources#threats) when they detect\na potential threat in your cloud resources. For a full list of available threat findings, see [Threat findings index](/security-command-center/docs/threat-findings-index).\n\nOverview\n\nA process started with stream redirection to a remote connected socket. Spawning\na network-connected shell can allow an attacker to perform arbitrary actions\nafter a limited initial compromise.\n\nHow to respond\n\nTo respond to this finding, do the following:\n\nStep 1: Review finding details\n\n1. Open a `Reverse Shell` finding as directed in [Reviewing\n findings](/security-command-center/docs/how-to-investigate-threats#reviewing_findings). The details panel for the\n finding opens to the **Summary** tab.\n\n2. On the **Summary** tab, review the information in the following sections:\n\n - **What was detected** , especially the following fields:\n - **Program binary**: the absolute path of the process started with stream redirection to a remote socket.\n - **Arguments**: the arguments provided when invoking the process binary.\n - **Affected resource** , especially the following fields:\n - **Resource full name** : the [full resource name](/apis/design/resource_names) of the cluster.\n - **Project full name**: the affected Google Cloud project.\n - **Related links** , especially the following fields:\n - **VirusTotal indicator**: link to the VirusTotal analysis page.\n3. In the detail view of the finding, click the **JSON** tab.\n\n4. In the JSON, note the following fields.\n\n - `resource`:\n - `project_display_name`: the name of the project that contains the asset.\n - `sourceProperties`:\n - `Pod_Namespace`: the name of the Pod's Kubernetes namespace.\n - `Pod_Name`: the name of the GKE Pod.\n - `Container_Name`: the name of the affected container.\n - `VM_Instance_Name`: the name of the GKE node where the Pod executed.\n - `Reverse_Shell_Stdin_Redirection_Dst_Ip`: the remote IP address of the connection\n - `Reverse_Shell_Stdin_Redirection_Dst_Port`: the remote port\n - `Reverse_Shell_Stdin_Redirection_Src_Ip`: the local IP address of the connection\n - `Reverse_Shell_Stdin_Redirection_Src_Port`: the local port\n - `Container_Image_Uri`: the name of the container image being executed.\n\nStep 2: Review cluster and node\n\n1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the **Kubernetes clusters** page.\n\n [Go to Kubernetes clusters](https://console.cloud.google.com/kubernetes/list)\n2. On the Google Cloud console toolbar, select the project listed in\n `resource.project_display_name`, if necessary.\n\n3. Select the cluster listed in `resource.name`. Note any metadata about\n the cluster and its owner.\n\n4. Click the **Nodes** tab. Select the node listed in `VM_Instance_Name`.\n\n5. Click the **Details** tab and note the\n `container.googleapis.com/instance_id` annotation.\n\nStep 3: Review Pod\n\n1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the **Kubernetes Workloads** page.\n\n [Go to Kubernetes Workloads](https://console.cloud.google.com/kubernetes/workload)\n2. On the Google Cloud console toolbar, select the project listed in\n `resource.project_display_name`, if necessary.\n\n3. Filter on the cluster listed in `resource.name` and the Pod namespace\n listed in `Pod_Namespace`, if necessary.\n\n4. Select the Pod listed in `Pod_Name`. Note any metadata about the Pod and\n its owner.\n\nStep 4: Check logs\n\n1. In the Google Cloud console, go to **Logs Explorer**.\n\n [Go to Logs Explorer](https://console.cloud.google.com/logs/query)\n2. On the Google Cloud console toolbar, select the project listed in\n `resource.project_display_name`, if necessary.\n\n3. Set **Select time range** to the period of interest.\n\n4. On the page that loads, do the following:\n\n 1. Find Pod logs for `Pod_Name` by using the following filter:\n - `resource.type=\"k8s_container\"`\n - `resource.labels.project_id=\"`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003eresource.project_display_name\u003c/var\u003e`\"`\n - `resource.labels.location=\"`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003elocation\u003c/var\u003e`\"`\n - `resource.labels.cluster_name=\"`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003ecluster_name\u003c/var\u003e`\"`\n - `resource.labels.namespace_name=\"`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003ePod_Namespace\u003c/var\u003e`\"`\n - `resource.labels.pod_name=\"`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003ePod_Name\u003c/var\u003e`\"`\n 2. Find cluster audit logs by using the following filter:\n - `logName=\"projects/`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003eresource.project_display_name\u003c/var\u003e`/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Factivity\"`\n - `resource.type=\"k8s_cluster\"`\n - `resource.labels.project_id=\"`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003eresource.project_display_name\u003c/var\u003e`\"`\n - `resource.labels.location=\"`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003elocation\u003c/var\u003e`\"`\n - `resource.labels.cluster_name=\"`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003ecluster_name\u003c/var\u003e`\"`\n - \u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003ePod_Name\u003c/var\u003e\n 3. Find GKE node console logs by using the following filter:\n - `resource.type=\"gce_instance\"`\n - `resource.labels.instance_id=\"`\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003einstance_id\u003c/var\u003e`\"`\n\nStep 5: Investigate running container\n\nIf the container is still running, it might be possible to investigate the\ncontainer environment directly.\n\n1. Go to the Google Cloud console.\n\n [Open Google Cloud console](https://console.cloud.google.com/)\n2. On the Google Cloud console toolbar, select the project listed in\n `resource.project_display_name`, if necessary.\n\n3. Click **Activate Cloud Shell** .\n\n4. Obtain GKE credentials for your cluster by running the\n following commands.\n\n For zonal clusters: \n\n gcloud container clusters get-credentials \u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003ecluster_name\u003c/var\u003e --zone \u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003elocation\u003c/var\u003e --project \u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003eresource.project_display_name\u003c/var\u003e\n\n For regional clusters: \n\n gcloud container clusters get-credentials \u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003ecluster_name\u003c/var\u003e --region \u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003elocation\u003c/var\u003e --project \u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003eresource.project_display_name\u003c/var\u003e\n\n5. Launch a shell within the container environment by running:\n\n kubectl exec --namespace=\u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003ePod_Namespace\u003c/var\u003e -ti \u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003ePod_Name\u003c/var\u003e -c \u003cvar class=\"edit\" translate=\"no\"\u003eContainer_Name\u003c/var\u003e -- /bin/sh\n\n This command requires the container to have a shell installed at `/bin/sh`.\n\n To view all processes running in the container, run the following command\n in the container shell: \n\n ps axjf\n\n This command requires the container to have `/bin/ps` installed.\n\nStep 6: Research attack and response methods\n\n1. Review MITRE ATT\\&CK framework entries for this finding type: [Command and Scripting Interpreter](https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1059/), [Ingress Tool Transfer](https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1105/).\n2. Check the SHA-256 hash value for the binary flagged as malicious on [VirusTotal](https://www.virustotal.com) by clicking the link in **VirusTotal indicator**. VirusTotal is an Alphabet-owned service that provides context on potentially malicious files, URLs, domains, and IP addresses.\n3. To develop a response plan, combine your investigation results with the MITRE research and VirusTotal analysis.\n\nStep 7: Implement your response\n\n\nThe following response plan might be appropriate for this finding, but might also impact operations.\nCarefully evaluate the information you gather in your investigation to determine the best way to\nresolve findings.\n\n- Contact the owner of the project with the compromised container.\n- Stop or [delete](/container-registry/docs/managing#deleting_images) the compromised container and replace it with a [new container](/compute/docs/containers).\n\nWhat's next\n\n- Learn [how to work with threat\n findings in Security Command Center](/security-command-center/docs/how-to-investigate-threats).\n- Refer to the [Threat findings index](/security-command-center/docs/threat-findings-index).\n- Learn how to [review a\n finding](/security-command-center/docs/how-to-investigate-threats#reviewing_findings) through the Google Cloud console.\n- Learn about the [services that\n generate threat findings](/security-command-center/docs/concepts-security-sources#threats)."]]