Swrort

Category: trojan_generic · Aliases: None known · Sample count (EMBER 2018): 161 · Enrichment: expert-seo · Updated: 2026-06-09

Overview

Backdoor:Win32/Swrort is a stealthy, persistent Remote Access Trojan (RAT) engineered to infiltrate endpoints, establish a covert communication channel, and provide attackers with interactive control for espionage and data exfiltration.

What is Swrort?
For the victim, Swrort provides zero visual indicators of compromise. For threat intelligence analysts, Swrort represents a capable backdoor frequently utilized in targeted attacks. It is designed to bypass initial security controls, harvest comprehensive system intelligence, and maintain long-term, undetected access to the victim network.

Infection Vectors & Threat Hunting
Swrort is typically delivered via spearphishing campaigns containing weaponized Office documents (employing malicious VBA macros) or dropped as a secondary payload by exploit kits. Upon execution, it utilizes heavy packing and obfuscation to evade static antivirus signatures. It drops a randomized executable into the %AppData% or %SystemRoot% directories. Persistence is achieved by creating a hidden scheduled task or modifying the Registry Run keys. Swrort frequently injects its core modules into legitimate system processes (like svchost.exe) to mask its outbound network traffic.

Forensic Analysis & Impact
Threat hunters should investigate EDR alerts for 'Suspicious Process Injection' or 'Anomalous Child Process Spawning'. Network logs will often reveal Swrort reaching out to compromised domains using encrypted HTTP/HTTPS traffic. The presence of unexpected, hidden scheduled tasks designed to execute randomly named binaries in the user's profile is a strong IoC. Memory analysis is crucial to extract the injected modules and identify the specific C2 infrastructure.

MITRE ATT&CK Techniques

Observed techniques used by this family, mapped to the MITRE ATT&CK framework:

TechniqueNameTactic
T1055Process InjectionDefense Evasion
T1105Ingress Tool TransferCommand and Control
T1547.001Boot or Logon Autostart Execution: Registry Run Keys / Startup FolderPersistence
T1053.005Scheduled Task/Job: Scheduled TaskPersistence
T1027Obfuscated Files or InformationDefense Evasion

Generated Detections (Boilerplate)

These YARA and Sigma rules are auto-generated based on the family name and aliases. They must be heavily tuned before deployment in a production environment.

YARA Rule

rule MALWARE_WIN_SWRORT {
    meta:
        description = "Detects Swrort (trojan_generic)"
        author = "SystemHelpdesk Boilerplate Generator"
        date = "2026-07-06"
    strings:
        $s1 = "swrort" ascii wide nocase
    condition:
        uint16(0) == 0x5a4d and any of them
}

Sigma Rule

title: Suspicious Swrort Activity
id: 45370abdc75a778e1232c9a369c0d1a9
status: experimental
description: Detects generic indicators of the swrort malware family.
logsource:
    category: process_creation
    product: windows
detection:
    selection:
        Image|endswith:
            - '\cmd.exe'
            - '\powershell.exe'
        CommandLine|contains:
            - "*swrort*"
    condition: selection
level: medium

Containment & Response Steps

Ordered checklist for responders. Adapt to your environment and engage professional support for active incidents.

  1. Instantly isolate the endpoint from the network to sever the attacker's interactive, remote-control session.
  2. Capture a full forensic memory image of the machine to extract the decrypted Swrort payload and its C2 configuration.
  3. Audit the Windows Task Scheduler and Registry Run keys to identify and remove the Swrort persistence mechanisms.
  4. Assume total endpoint compromise; perform a clean OS rebuild and force password resets for all accounts that accessed the machine.

What to Avoid

Common mistakes during response to this family that can destroy evidence, spread the infection, or worsen recovery.

  1. Do not leave the machine connected to the network during triage; the attacker has live access and will likely destroy evidence or move laterally.
  2. Avoid relying solely on manual file deletion, as the injected processes will likely just recreate the dropped binaries.

References & External Analysis

Related Families (Category: trojan_generic)

Explore other malware families in the same category:

Need help with an active incident? Published by the SystemHelpdesk team.

Machine-readable

Get this profile as JSON: https://jordanricky1604-ship-it.github.io/malware-families-catalog/api/swrort.json

Ecosystem & Interactive Environments

This profile is part of the Malware Families Catalog, a public dataset of 2,899 malware families. The catalog is also published across our ecosystem: Hugging Face, Kaggle, Replit, StackBlitz, CodeSandbox, and CodePen.