Unusual Child Process of dns.exe
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In this page
Rule name | Rule type | Log sources | MITRE ATT&CK tags | Severity |
Unusual Child Process of dns.exe | Standard | Windows | Initial Access: External Remote Services (T1133), Persistence: External Remote Services (T1133) | Trouble |
About the rule
Rule Type
Standard
Rule Description
dns.exe is the legitimate Windows DNS Server process, responsible for providing domain name resolution across the network. Attackers sometimes exploit this trusted system component by spawning malicious or unexpected child processes from dns.exe to hide their activity, maintain persistence, or facilitate further lateral movement. This rule is designed to detect unusual or suspicious child processes spawned by dns.exe such as command shells, scripting engines (PowerShell, wscript, cscript), or binaries not typically associated with DNS operations.
Severity
Trouble
Rule journey
Attack chain scenario
Initial access → Privilege escalation → dns.exe exploited → Launching of suspicious child process → Impact
Impact
- Defense evasion
- Data exfiltration
- Covert command and control
- Evasion of traditional network security tools
- Information disclosure
Rule Requirement
Prerequisites
Use the Group Policy Management Console to audit process creation and process termination.
Install Sysmon from Microsoft Sysinternals and download the Sysmon configuration file that includes process creation monitoring. Add network connection events to the configuration file to monitor all network activity.
Create a new registry key "Microsoft-Windows-Sysmon/Operational" in the directory "Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\EventLog\" if not already created.
Criteria
Action1: actionname = "Process started" AND PARENTPROCESSNAME endswith "\dns.exe" AND PROCESSNAME notendswith "\conhost.exe" select Action1.HOSTNAME,Action1.MESSAGE,Action1.COMMANDLINE,Action1.FILE_NAME,Action1.PROCESSNAME,Action1.USERNAME,Action1.PARENTPROCESSNAME
Detection
Execution Mode
realtime
Log Sources
Windows
MITRE ATT&CK
Initial Access: External Remote Services (T1133), Persistence: External Remote Services (T1133)
Security Standards
Enabling this rule will help you meet the security standard's requirement listed below:
DE.CM-01: Networks and network services are monitored to find potentially adverse events.
When this rule is triggered, you’re notified that dns.exe has spawned an unusual or suspicious child process. This enables you to review the context of process creation, analyze parent-child relationships, and swiftly detect potential abuse of legitimate system services for malicious activity.
Author
Tim Rauch, Elastic (idea)
Future actions
Known False Positives
This rule may trigger when legitimate DNS server extensions, debugging activities, or administrative scripts spawn processes from dns.exe in managed environments. Investigate the context, command-line parameters, and legitimacy of the spawned child processes before responding.
Next Steps
When this rule is triggered, the following measures can be implemented:
- Identification: Identify if the flagged event is a new incident or part of an existing incident.
- Analysis: Analyze the impact and extent of the incident to comprehend the severity of the attack using the Incident Workbench.
- Response: Respond promptly by initiating an automated workflow to interrupt the network connections and cease the malicious process.
- Reconfiguration: Update allowlists of legitimate DNS server behaviors, enhance detection tuning, and continue monitoring for recurrence or similar anomalous activity.
Mitigation
Mitigation ID | Mitigation Name | Mitigation description |
M1042 | Disable or Remove Feature or Program | Disable or block remotely available services that may be unnecessary. |
M1035 | Limit Access to Resource Over Network | Limit access to remote services through centrally managed concentrators such as VPNs and other managed remote access systems. |
M1032 | Multi-factor Authentication | Use strong two-factor or multi-factor authentication for remote service accounts to mitigate an adversary's ability to leverage stolen credentials, but be aware of Multi-Factor Authentication Interception techniques for some two-factor authentication implementations. |
M1030 | Network Segmentation | Deny direct remote access to internal systems through the use of network proxies, gateways, and firewalls. |


