Wednesday, April 13, 2022

[SOLVED] What is really happening in this bash code that creates a shell with netcat and pipes?

Issue

mkfifo /tmp/f ; cat /tmp/f | /bin/bash -i 2>&1 | nc -l -p 1234 > /tmp/f

I am new to bash, I am trying to understand this piece of "code".

  1. Why a while loop is not needed? How can this work? Is it itself a loop? Why? How? Also, cat filePipe by itself ONLY PRINTS ONE LINE, and then exits (I just tested it), and to make cat not to exit I do: while cat pipeFile ; do : ; done. So how does that above work?
  2. I don't get the order of execution... at the beginning /tmp/f is empty, so cat /tmp/f should "send" an empty stream to /bin/bash which just send it to nc which opens a connection and "sends" the interactive bash to whoever connects... and the response of the client is sent to /tmp/f ... and then? What? How can it can go back and do the same things again?

Solution

When bash parses the line mkfifo /tmp/f ; cat /tmp/f | /bin/bash -i 2>&1 | nc -l -p 1234 > /tmp/f, several things happen. First, the fifo is created. Then, in no particular order, 3 things happen: cat is started, bash is started and nc is started with its output stream connected to /tmp/f. cat is now going to block until some other process opens /tmp/f for writing; the nc is about to do that (or already did it, but we don't know if cat will start before nc or if nc starts before cat, nor do we know in which order they will open the fifo, but whoever does it first will block until the other completes the operation). Once all 3 processes start, they will just sit there waiting for some data. Eventually, some external process connects to port 1234 and sends some data into nc, which writes into /tmp/f. cat (eventually) reads that data and sends it downstream to bash, which processes the input and (probably) writes some data into nc, which sends it back across the socket connection.

If you have a test case in which cat /tmp/f only writes one line of data, that is simply because whatever process you used to write into /tmp/f only wrote a single line. Try: printf 'foo\nbar\nbaz\n' > /tmp/f & cat /tmp/f or while sleep 1; do date; done > /tmp/f & cat /tmp/f



Answered By - William Pursell
Answer Checked By - Marie Seifert (WPSolving Admin)