What is DNS Cache

The DNS cache maintains a database of recent DNS resolution in memory. This allows for faster resolution of hosts that have been queried in the recent past. To keep this cache fresh and reduce the chance of stale records the time of items in the cache is of 1 day on Windows clients.

The DNS Client service in Windows is the one that manages the cache on a system, This time Window can be modified via the registry in the registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Dnscache\Parameters where the MaxCacheTtl property controls the time in the cache in seconds and the MaxNegativeCacheTtl property controls the time a failed response is cached.

Why is it Important

For an attacker, it means primarily situational awareness. It allows him to know what other systems this host has accessed and the IP address of the host. This may allow identifying security platforms by the FQDNs used as well as business process systems, both internal or in the cloud. On an important note for the attacker is that if his implant/agent on the system does not include its own resolution capability it has an IOC present on the system that can be used to track its command and control infrastructure.

For a defender, the ability to know what hosts a system may have connected to in the last 24 hours. This will permit a defender to query across his environment for hosts that are communicating or have communicated with a specific host if DNS resolution was part of the process and if the attacker is not using its own resolution method. If the attacker is “Living off the Land” and using OS tools it will still leave the ephemeral trace on the system until the cached entry TTL (Time to Live) expires.

MSFT_DNSClientCache class

In Windows 8/2012 Microsoft added the MSFT_DNSClientCache class into the CIM object database in Windows. The class is under the new namespace that was also added to Root\StandardCimv2 and the resources are provided as part of the DnsClientCim.dll. This allows us to query for instances of the class and get all entries for the DNS Cache database.

We can query using the Get-CimInstance cmdlet in PowerShell.