Title :
Detection of packed executables using support vector machines
Author :
Wang, Tzu-Yen ; Wu, Chin-Hsiung
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. Tech. & Comm., Shih Chien Univ., Kaohsiung, Taiwan
Abstract :
Executable packer is a kind of software protecting tools originally designed to pack the information of important programs against malicious reverse engineering. However, packing has also become one of the code obfuscation means prevailing among malware society. Using compression and encryption tactics, packers are able to alter the appearance of malware to confuse detection mechanisms such as pattern matching and heuristics analysis. Therefore, a generic packing detection framework (PDF) is proposed in this study. This framework first statically examines the Portable Executable (PE) file of each executable to gather a set of executable-related raw attributes. After running a subsequent attribute refinement process provided by PDF, valued attributes are extracted and then used to train a two-class support vector machines learning classifier to recognize whether a executable is packed. By evaluating on 1,056 non-packed and 3,784 packed executables, the resulting performances demonstrated that our PDF is promising in packing detection.
Keywords :
invasive software; learning (artificial intelligence); pattern classification; reverse engineering; support vector machines; compression tactics; encryption tactics; generic packing detection framework; heuristics analysis; learning classifier; malicious reverse engineering; malware society; packed executables detection; pattern matching; software protecting tools; support vector machines; Entropy; Feature extraction; Machine learning; Malware; Support vector machines; Testing; Training; Attribute refinement; Code obfuscation; Executable packer; Packing detection framework; Portable executable file; Support vector machines;
Conference_Titel :
Machine Learning and Cybernetics (ICMLC), 2011 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Guilin
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0305-8
DOI :
10.1109/ICMLC.2011.6016774