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Devnull is the name of a computer worm for the Linux operating system which has been named after /dev/null, Unix's null device. This worm was found on 30 September 2002.

This worm, once the host has been compromised, downloads and executes a shell script from a web server. This script downloads a gzipped executable file named k.gz from the same address, and then decompresses and runs the file.

This downloaded file appears to be an IRC client. It connects to different channels and waits for commands to process on the infected host.

Then the worm checks for presence of the GCC compiler on the local system and, if found, it creates a directory called .socket2. Next it downloads a compressed file called devnull.tgz. After decompressing, two files are created: an ELF binary file called devnull and a source script file called sslx.c. The latter gets compiled into an ELF binary sslx.

The executable will scan for vulnerable hosts and it will use the compiled program to exploit the known OpenSSL vulnerability.
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