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I would say that the CPU space is about half of the box, with the other half being a very large memory. I was shocked to see that the flash on the device was seemingly protected.As for the booting process, I think that stealing the binaries used to power up the wireless interface would be very beneficial.However, I also feel that the wireless interface is a bit of a firewall. As soon as the boot process loads, one of the first things it does is to query the status of /sys/module/rt73/parameters/power_mode and show it as disabled. We also see the interface launch a WiFi scan to locate any ssid's to join. Once connected to a network, it stops looking for networks and hops directly to managed mode, making it trivial to crash the NAS at this point.It takes a lot of work to crash the device. One of the things that we can try is to cause the various components to start acting out of order. This may give us valuable information on how the software is working. The process for doing this is as follows: 1. Take the target down or power it off.2. While powering down, immediately power up the hard drive, using the rfkill utility. In the rfkill, specify that the disk is on. Do the same for usb, firewire, ethernet, and of course wifi. NOTE: Do not power up the wifi radio. Do not touch anything else and power up every single component.
After some more research and note taking, I made several interesting observations. There is something about the firmware that makes it very hard to attack on the surface. It is hard to believe that the device is updated as often as it is.The drives are mounted on a the second line of defense. One of the first things the device does when it starts up is to scan and mount all available volumes. I found that I could easily probe almost every file under the root directory of the first drive until I found the IP address of a server on the network. However, once I had the IP address, there really wasn't anything that I could do to attack the device directly. d2c66b5586