Detection rules › Splunk

MacOS LoginHook Persistence

Status
production
Severity
medium
Group by
CurrentDirectory, command_line, computer_name, original_file_name, parent_process_id, process_guid, process_hash, process_id, process_name, user, user_id, vendor_product
Author
Raven Tait, Splunk
Source
github.com/splunk/security_content

Identifies attempts to configure a macOS LoginHook via the defaults utility. LoginHooks enable automatic execution of a script or program upon user login and have historically been abused for persistence. Creation or modification of this setting may indicate an attempt to establish startup execution outside standard LaunchAgent mechanisms.

MITRE ATT&CK coverage

Rule body splunk

name: MacOS LoginHook Persistence
id: a04832e7-9d1d-49b1-a684-e31bcd775c77
version: 3
creation_date: '2026-04-14'
modification_date: '2026-05-13'
author: Raven Tait, Splunk
status: production
type: TTP
description: |-
    Identifies attempts to configure a macOS LoginHook via the defaults utility. LoginHooks enable automatic execution of a script or program upon user login and have historically been abused for persistence.
    Creation or modification of this setting may indicate an attempt to establish startup execution outside standard LaunchAgent mechanisms.
data_source:
    - Osquery Results
search: |-
    | tstats `security_content_summariesonly`
      count min(_time) as firstTime
            max(_time) as lastTime
    
    from datamodel=Endpoint.Processes where
    
    Processes.process = "*defaults *"
    Processes.process = "*write*"
    Processes.process = "*loginwindow*"
    Processes.process = "*loginhook*"
    
    by Processes.dest Processes.original_file_name Processes.parent_process_id
       Processes.process Processes.process_exec Processes.process_guid
       Processes.process_hash Processes.process_id
       Processes.process_current_directory Processes.process_name
       Processes.process_path Processes.user
       Processes.user_id Processes.vendor_product
    
    | `drop_dm_object_name(Processes)`
    | `security_content_ctime(firstTime)`
    | `security_content_ctime(lastTime)`
    | `macos_loginhook_persistence_filter`
how_to_implement: |-
    This detection uses osquery and endpoint security on MacOS. Follow the link in references, which describes how to setup process auditing in MacOS with endpoint security and osquery.
    Also the [TA-OSquery](https://splunkbase.splunk.com/app/8574) must be deployed across your indexers and universal forwarders in order to have the osquery data populate the data models.
known_false_positives: |-
    This method is possibly still used by legacy enterprise management scripts. Update filter macro to remove false positives.
references:
    - https://osquery.readthedocs.io/en/stable/deployment/process-auditing/
    - https://www.loobins.io/binaries/defaults/
drilldown_searches:
    - name: View the detection results for - "$user$" and "$dest$"
      search: '%original_detection_search% | search  user = "$user$" dest = "$dest$"'
      earliest_offset: $info_min_time$
      latest_offset: $info_max_time$
    - name: View risk events for the last 7 days for - "$user$" and "$dest$"
      search: '| from datamodel Risk.All_Risk | search normalized_risk_object IN ("$user$", "$dest$") | stats count min(_time) as firstTime max(_time) as lastTime values(search_name) as "Search Name" values(risk_message) as "Risk Message" values(analyticstories) as "Analytic Stories" values(annotations._all) as "Annotations" values(annotations.mitre_attack.mitre_tactic) as "ATT&CK Tactics" by normalized_risk_object | `security_content_ctime(firstTime)` | `security_content_ctime(lastTime)`'
      earliest_offset: 7d
      latest_offset: "0"
finding:
    title: Loginhook created on $dest$ by $user$ via $process$
    entity:
        field: user
        type: user
        score: 50
intermediate_findings:
    entities:
        - field: dest
          type: system
          score: 50
          message: Loginhook created on $dest$ by $user$ via $process$
threat_objects:
    - field: process
      type: process
analytic_story:
    - MacOS Post-Exploitation
asset_type: Endpoint
mitre_attack_id:
    - T1037.002
product:
    - Splunk Enterprise
    - Splunk Enterprise Security
    - Splunk Cloud
category: endpoint
security_domain: endpoint
tests:
    - name: True Positive Test
      attack_data:
        - data: https://media.githubusercontent.com/media/splunk/attack_data/master/datasets/attack_techniques/T1037.002/osquery_logon_scripts/osquery.log
          source: osquery
          sourcetype: osquery:results
      test_type: unit

Stages and Predicates

Stage 1: tstats

| tstats `security_content_summariesonly`
  count min(_time) as firstTime
        max(_time) as lastTime

from datamodel=Endpoint.Processes where

Processes.process = "*defaults *"
Processes.process = "*write*"
Processes.process = "*loginwindow*"
Processes.process = "*loginhook*"

by Processes.dest Processes.original_file_name Processes.parent_process_id
   Processes.process Processes.process_exec Processes.process_guid
   Processes.process_hash Processes.process_id
   Processes.process_current_directory Processes.process_name
   Processes.process_path Processes.user
   Processes.user_id Processes.vendor_product

Stage 2: search

| `drop_dm_object_name(Processes)`

Stage 3: search

| `security_content_ctime(firstTime)`

Stage 4: search

| `security_content_ctime(lastTime)`

Stage 5: search

| `macos_loginhook_persistence_filter`

Indicators

Each row is a field, operator, and value that the rule matches. The corpus column counts how many other rules in the catalog look for the same combination: high numbers point to widely-used, community-vetted indicators. Blank or 1 shows that the indicator is specific to this rule.

FieldKindValues
Processes.processeq
  • "*defaults *"
  • "*loginhook*"
  • "*loginwindow*"
  • "*write*"