Crescendo is a swift based, real time event viewer for macOS. It utilizes Apple’s Endpoint Security Framework.
Apple has introduced some new security mechanisms that we need to enable to get Crescendo running.
- Ensure that you have moved the app to your /Applications director or the system extension will fail to load.
- For the first run you will be prompted to approve the system extension, after clicking the “Start” button. NOTE: I have noticed that there is an issue where System Preferences won’t show an allow button. I assume this is some internal issue Apple needs to workout. Clicking back to System Preferences and navigating forward again seems to fix the issue.
- You will need to enable Full Disk Access for the system extension.
Requirements
Crescendo is only compatible with >=10.15.X and at least Xcode 10.
Also Read – HTBenum : A Linux Enumeration Script For Hack The Box
Components
This project consists of three main components:
- A system extension (CrescendoExtension)
- A Framework wrapper around the Endpoint Security Framework (Crescendo)
- An app for viewing events in a nice little user interface (CrescendoApp)
Testing & Development
It is highly recommended to test this code in a virtual machine with SIP disabled, since this project requires the endpoint-security entitlement, TCC, and proper signing when SIP is enabled.
- Boot into Recovery mode on macOS
- Disable SIP and AMFI
csrutil disable
nvram boot-args=”amfi_get_out_of_my_way=0x1″
- Reboot
- Enable developer mode so our extensions will reload everytime we call
OSSystemExtensionManager.shared.submitRequest
systemextensionsctl developer on
Signing
If you wish to sign your own application, it is highly recommend to read Apple’s documentation on System Extension requirements and Notorization.
Signing and entitlement is a non-trivial exercise.
Building
I have included my .xproj file in this release to get folks started. In the future I will likely move to using the new xcconfig file as this seems much more sane of an approach instead of commiting xproj files. If you wish to simply build the example cli application you can do so with Xcode.
In order to build this application and run it on a production macOS system, you will need the endpoint-security entitlement and a developer certificate from Apple.
The Crescendo framework can easily be bundled with any Swift application. I may move to CocoaPods in the future, but I am unfamiliar with them right now.
Issues/Bugs/Features
Please feel free to raise an issue if you wish to see a feature added or encounter an issue. If you wish to contribute a pull request, please just ensure you run swiftlint over your code before contributing.
I will cut releases for the compiled + signed app and include them in the Releases tab as needed.
Troubleshooting
- If you are running on a production Mac, you should NOT disable SIP or AMFI. Those instructions are for developers wishing to make code changes.
- Did you enable the system extension by clicking the “Allow” button in
System Preferences -> Security & Privacy
? If not, you will not see any events. - Did you enable full disk access in
System Preferences -> Security & Privacy -> Privacy Tab
? If not, you will not see any events. - If you encounter any issues, open Console.app and search for
crescendo
or<your_bundle_id>
/com.suprhackersteve
as a filter, that should assist you in troubleshooting any potential issues. It is also a good idea to check in CrashReporter and see if the extension has crashed or exited withfatalError
. - If you wish to forcefully unload the system extension, there is a menu item named “Unload System Extension” that will unload it. This action may lead to odd side effects, only do it if you know what you are doing.
- If you have added a process to the blacklist and it is still allowed to execute, remember to check the real full path. Simply using /Applications/Foo.app, will not be enough to prevent the execution. Also, many macOS applications are launched via xpcproxy.