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A distroless container is a type of container that contains only the necessary dependencies to run a specific application, without any additional software or tools that are not required. These containers are designed to be as lightweight and secure as possible, and they aim to minimize the attack surface by removing any unnecessary components.
Distroless containers are often used in production environments where security and reliability are paramount.
Some examples of distroless containers are:
- Provided by Google: https://console.cloud.google.com/gcr/images/distroless/GLOBAL
- Provided by Chainguard: https://github.com/chainguard-images/images/tree/main/images
The goal of weaponize a distroless container is to be able to execute arbitrary binaries and payloads even with the limitations implied by distroless (lack of common binaries in the system) and also protections commonly found in containers such as read-only or no-execute in /dev/shm
.
Coming at some point of 2023...
****In this post, it is explained that the binary openssl
is frequently found in these containers, potentially because it's needed by the software that is going to be running inside the container.
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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.