• Book Dewayne Hart
  • Dewaynehart@dewaynehart.com
  • (470) 409 8316
  • Speaker Bio
  • Home
  • About
  • Speaker
  • Books
  • Podcast
  • Contact
  • Home
  • About
  • Speaker
  • Books
  • Podcast
  • Contact
Facebook-f Linkedin-in Youtube X-twitter Globe
Order books

RESURGE Malware Exploits Ivanti Flaw with Rootkit and Web Shell Features

Posted on March 30, 2025 by admin

[ad_1]

Mar 30, 2025Ravie LakshmananVulnerability / Zero-Day

RESURGE Malware

The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has shed light on a new malware called RESURGE that has been deployed as part of exploitation activity targeting a now-patched security flaw in Ivanti Connect Secure (ICS) appliances.

“RESURGE contains capabilities of the SPAWNCHIMERA malware variant, including surviving reboots; however, RESURGE contains distinctive commands that alter its behavior,” the agency said. “The file contains capabilities of a rootkit, dropper, backdoor, bootkit, proxy, and tunneler.”

The security vulnerability associated with the deployment of the malware is CVE-2025-0282, a stack-based buffer overflow vulnerability affecting Ivanti Connect Secure, Policy Secure, and ZTA Gateways that could result in remote code execution.

Cybersecurity

It impacts the following versions –

  • Ivanti Connect Secure before version 22.7R2.5
  • Ivanti Policy Secure before version 22.7R1.2, and
  • Ivanti Neurons for ZTA gateways before version 22.7R2.3

According to Google-owned Mandiant, CVE-2025-0282 has been weaponized to deliver what’s called the SPAWN ecosystem of malware, comprising several components such as SPAWNANT, SPAWNMOLE, and SPAWNSNAIL. The use of SPAWN has been attributed to a China-nexus espionage group dubbed UNC5337.

Last month, JPCERT/CC revealed that it observed the security defect being used to deliver an updated version of SPAWN known as SPAWNCHIMERA, which combines all the aforementioned disparate modules into one monolithic malware, while also incorporating changes to facilitate inter-process communication via UNIX domain sockets.

Most notably, the revised variant harbored a feature to patch CVE-2025-0282 so as to prevent other malicious actors from exploiting it for their campaigns.

RESURGE (“libdsupgrade.so”), per CISA, is an improvement over SPAWNCHIMERA with support for three new commands –

  • Insert itself into “ld.so.preload,” set up a web shell, manipulate integrity checks, and modify files
  • Enable the use of web shells for credential harvesting, account creation, password resets, and privilege escalation
  • Copy the web shell to the Ivanti running boot disk and manipulate the running coreboot image

CISA said it also unearthed two other artifacts from an unspecified critical infrastructure entity’s ICS device: A variant of SPAWNSLOTH (“liblogblock.so”) contained within RESURGE and a bespoke 64-bit Linux ELF binary (“dsmain”).

Cybersecurity

“The [SPAWNSLOTH variant] tampers with the Ivanti device logs,” it said. “The third file is a custom embedded binary that contains an open-source shell script and a subset of applets from the open-source tool BusyBox. The open-source shell script allows for the ability to extract an uncompressed kernel image (vmlinux) from a compromised kernel image.”

It’s worth noting that CVE-2025-0282 has also been exploited as a zero-day by another China-linked threat group tracked as Silk Typhoon (formerly Hafnium), Microsoft disclosed earlier this month.

The latest findings indicate that the threat actors behind the malware are actively refining and reworking their tradecraft, making it imperative that organizations patch their Ivanti instances to the latest version.

As further mitigation, it’s advised to reset credentials of privileged and non-privileged accounts, rotate passwords for all domain users and all local accounts, review access policies to temporarily revoke privileges for affected devices, reset relevant account credentials or access keys, and monitor accounts for signs of anomalous activity.

Found this article interesting? Follow us on Twitter  and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post.



[ad_2]

Recent Posts

  • No Blind Spots: A Veteran’s Blueprint to Protect Critical Infrastructure
  • Cybersecurity as a Growth Lever: A Board-Ready Playbook for CIOs and CTOs
  • From Reaction to Readiness: Building a Cybersecurity Mindset for Proactive Defense
  • Cybersecurity Leadership in 2026: Executive Decisions that Drive Resilience and Growth
  • Implementing a Hacker’s Mindset: Build a Security Culture That Hunts, Learns, and Wins

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • July 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023

Categories

  • Cyber News
  • Uncategorized

Book Dewayne Hart for your next event

  • Dewaynehart@dewaynehart.com
  • (470) 409 8316
Facebook-f Linkedin-in Youtube X-twitter Globe
© 2025 Dewayne Hart | Cybersecurity Leadership & Innovation