T1559 Elastic Security · Elastic

Detect Inter-Process Communication in Elastic Security

Adversaries may abuse inter-process communication (IPC) mechanisms for local code execution, command-and-control channel establishment, or lateral movement. IPC mechanisms allow processes to share data, communicate, or synchronize execution. On Windows, adversaries commonly abuse named pipes to relay commands between C2 framework components (Havoc SMB demon, Cobalt Strike pipe-based beacons, Metasploit named pipe stagers), move data between kernel and user mode components (Uroburos/Snake malware), or pipe output from arbitrary commands to a controlling process (LunarWeb, ROADSWEEP, OilBooster). The IPC$ administrative share provides a network-accessible path for named pipe connections, enabling cross-host pipe-based C2 (HyperStack, Cobalt Strike lateral movement). On Linux and macOS, adversaries leverage Unix domain sockets (PITSTOP), shared memory segments via shmget (RotaJakiro), and anonymous pipes for inter-process communication. Medusa Ransomware and Cyclops Blink use the CreatePipe API to coordinate parallel operations. Raspberry Robin embeds a Tor client that communicates with its main payload via shared process memory. Detection focuses on named pipe creation by high-risk processes, non-standard pipe names matching known C2 framework patterns, and unusual network-based IPC$ share access.

MITRE ATT&CK

Tactic
Execution
Technique
T1559 Inter-Process Communication
Canonical reference
https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/T1559/

Elastic Detection Query

Elastic Security (Elastic)
eql
sequence by host.name with maxspan=5m
  [network where event.action == "network_connection" and destination.port == 445 and
   process.name in~ ("rundll32.exe", "regsvr32.exe", "mshta.exe", "wscript.exe", "cscript.exe",
                      "powershell.exe", "pwsh.exe", "certutil.exe", "msiexec.exe", "dllhost.exe") and
   not destination.ip in ("127.0.0.1", "::1")]
  [file where event.action == "creation" and
   file.path like~ "*\\pipe\\*" and
   not file.name in~ ("srvsvc", "wkssvc", "netlogon", "samr", "lsarpc", "spoolss", "browser",
                      "epmapper", "MsFteWds", "atsvc", "trkwks", "W32TIME_ALT",
                      "svcctl", "eventlog", "InitShutdown", "winreg", "protected_storage")]

OR

any where event.category == "file" and
  file.path like~ "*\\pipe\\*" and
  (
    file.name like~ "*postex_*" or
    file.name like~ "*meterpreter*" or
    file.name like~ "*msf-pipe*" or
    file.name like~ "*cobaltstrike*" or
    file.name like~ "*havoc_*" or
    file.name like~ "*MSSE-*" or
    file.name like~ "*win_svc_pipe*" or
    file.name like~ "*agent_pipe*" or
    file.name like~ "*mojo_fuzz*" or
    file.name like~ "*winsock_pipe*"
  )
high severity medium confidence

Detects Inter-Process Communication abuse via named pipe creation by high-risk processes or known C2 framework pipe name patterns. Sequences high-risk process SMB connections with subsequent named pipe file events, and independently flags known malicious pipe name patterns associated with Cobalt Strike, Metasploit, Havoc C2, and other offensive tooling.

Data Sources

Windows SysmonElastic Endpoint SecurityWindows Security Event Log

Required Tables

logs-endpoint.events.file-*logs-endpoint.events.network-*winlogbeat-*

False Positives & Tuning

  • Legitimate administrative tools using SMB named pipes for remote management such as PsExec, WMI, or DCOM operations that create temporary pipe names
  • Security testing platforms and vulnerability scanners that enumerate or connect to named pipes as part of authorized assessments
  • Development and debugging environments where custom pipe names are created by application frameworks or build tools running under scripting host processes
Download portable Sigma rule (.yml)

Other platforms for T1559


Testing Methodology

Validate this detection against 5 adversary techniques from Atomic Red Team. Each test below lists the behaviour to exercise and the telemetry you should expect to see. Executable commands and cleanup steps are available with Pro.

  1. Test 1Named Pipe Server Creation via PowerShell (Simulated C2 Listener)

    Expected signal: Sysmon Event ID 17 (PipeEvent - CreatePipe): Image=powershell.exe, PipeName=argus_ipc_test_pipe, ProcessId=<pid>, User=<current user>. Security Event 4688 (if process command line auditing is enabled) for the PowerShell invocation.

  2. Test 2Named Pipe with Known C2 Framework Pattern (Cobalt Strike postex_ simulation)

    Expected signal: Sysmon Event ID 17 (PipeEvent - CreatePipe): Image=powershell.exe, PipeName=postex_ssh_8a3f, ProcessId=<pid>. This is the highest-confidence detection trigger — the pipe name exactly matches the Cobalt Strike postex_ pattern.

  3. Test 3IPC$ Named Share Access via Net Use (Remote Pipe Connection Simulation)

    Expected signal: Windows Security Event ID 5145: ShareName=\\*\IPC$, IpAddress=127.0.0.1 (loopback — note: the detection filters loopback by default; modify the IpAddress filter to include 127.0.0.1 to capture this test). Security Event 4624 (logon) for the SMB session establishment. Sysmon Event ID 3 for the network connection on port 445 from cmd.exe.

  4. Test 4Anonymous Pipe Process Output Capture (OilBooster/ROADSWEEP Pattern)

    Expected signal: Sysmon Event ID 1 (Process Create): Parent Image=powershell.exe, Child Image=whoami.exe, ParentCommandLine contains 'RedirectStandardOutput'. Security Event 4688 (if command line auditing enabled) for whoami.exe creation with parent PID of the PowerShell process. Note: anonymous pipes do NOT generate Sysmon Event ID 17 — they are transient kernel objects with no name.

  5. Test 5Unix Domain Socket Listener (Linux IPC Abuse Simulation)

    Expected signal: Linux auditd (if configured with AF_UNIX socket rules): SYSCALL record for socket() with a0=1 (AF_UNIX), SYSCALL record for bind() with the socket path, SYSCALL record for listen(). Syslog/EDR process creation event for python3 with the IPC-related command arguments. File creation event for /tmp/argus_uds_test.sock. Check with: 'lsof /tmp/argus_uds_test.sock' or 'ss -xln | grep argus' while the script is running.

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