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Zip bomb

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In computing, a zip bomb, also known as a decompression bomb or zip of death (ZOD), is a malicious archive file designed to crash or render useless the program or system reading it. The older the system or program, the less likely it is that the zip bomb will be detected. It is often employed to disable antivirus software, in order to create an opening for more traditional malware.[1]

A zip bomb allows a program to function normally, but, instead of hijacking the program's operation, creates an archive that requires an excessive amount of time, disk space, or memory to unpack.[2]

Most modern antivirus programs can detect whether a file is a zip bomb in order to avoid unpacking it.[3]

Details and use

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A zip bomb is usually a small file for ease of transport and to avoid suspicion. However, when the file is unpacked, its contents are more than the system can handle.

A famous example of a zip bomb is the file 42.zip, which is a zip file of unknown authorship[4] consisting of 42 kilobytes of compressed data, containing five layers of nested zip files in sets of 16, each bottom-layer archive containing a 4.3-gigabyte (4294967295 bytes; GiB1 B) file for a total of 4.5 petabytes (4503599626321920 bytes; PiBMiB) of uncompressed data.[5]

In many anti-virus scanners, only a few layers of recursion are performed on archives to help prevent attacks that would cause a buffer overflow, an out-of-memory condition, or exceed an acceptable amount of program execution time.[citation needed] Zip bombs often rely on repetition of identical files to achieve their extreme compression ratios. Dynamic programming methods can be employed to limit traversal of such files, so that only one file is followed recursively at each level, effectively converting their exponential growth to linear.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Leyden, John. "DoS risk from Zip of death attacks on AV software?". www.theregister.co.uk.
  2. ^ Pelton, Joseph N (28 August 2018). Smart cities of today and tomorrow : better technology, infrastructure and security. Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-95822-4. OCLC 1097121557.
  3. ^ Bieringer, Peter (2004-02-12). "AERAsec - Network Security - Eigene Advisories". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2011-02-19.
  4. ^ Smith, Ernie (2019-07-10). "The Most Clever 'Zip Bomb' Ever Made Explodes a 46MB File to 4.5 Petabytes". VICE. Retrieved 2024-09-11.
  5. ^ a b Svoboda, David (8 April 2011). "IDS04-J. Safely extract files from ZipInputStream". SEI CERT Oracle Coding Standard for Java. Carnegie Melon University.