waitfor.exe

  • File Path: C:\WINDOWS\SysWOW64\waitfor.exe
  • Description: waitfor - wait/send a signal over a network

Hashes

Type Hash
MD5 4957D8FD62C3F47F3CBBF4BF33B5A82D
SHA1 34D19F22C89ACFAAEAFD3A828E119FF18B715FA7
SHA256 DAAA464B6DB46DBD0B81329F563993736A8F92C590716AA2C65DC5593D8F9034
SHA384 7B2B0C5CFE3451A84238C68CEBF5E1F0BECD9C0A3618E867A8926F9F222446B1AC9EC786648FB552206545A7C8BCFA70
SHA512 41FFDFED2B435C871F6E71AC8F01F40B0B064DAD9E8EF30B6717A46255A26A72BDFAB08AA93F1ED456C75C21DD66F49CB90AEB03EEA1AEAA531F3B79D3BB15AE
SSDEEP 768:fIHaIW5dWEwe+LofdLadiVfp4wQhHuawisNxLApk+e:fIHaIWFeLiFadidzQhOaw1xQk

Runtime Data

Usage (stdout):


WaitFor has two ways of working: 

Syntax 1: to send a signal
    WAITFOR [/S system [/U user [/P [password]]]] /SI signal

Syntax 2: to wait for a signal
    WAITFOR [/T timeout] signal 

Description:
    This tool sends, or waits for, a signal on a system. When /S is not
    specified, the signal will be broadcasted to all the systems in a
    domain. If /S is specified, then the signal will be sent only
    to the specified system.

Parameter List:
    /S     system         Specifies remote system to send signal to.

    /U     [domain\]user  Specifies the user context under which
                          the command should execute.

    /P     [password]     Specifies the password for the given user context.

    /SI                   Sends the signal across the net to waiting machines

    /T     timeout        Number of seconds to wait for signal. Valid range
                          is 1 - 99999. Default is to wait forever for signal.

    signal                The name of the signal to wait for or to send.

    /?                    Displays this help message.

    NOTE: A system can wait for multiple unique signal names.
    The signal name cannot exceed 225 characters and cannot
    contain characters other than a-z, A-Z, 0-9 and ASCII 
    characters in the range 128-255.

Examples:
    WAITFOR /?
    WAITFOR SetupReady 
    WAITFOR CopyDone /T 100 
    WAITFOR /SI SetupReady 
    WAITFOR /S system  /U user /P password /SI CopyDone

Usage (stderr):

ERROR: The signal cannot contain characters other than a-z, A-Z, 0-9 
and ASCII characters in the range 128-255.

Child Processes:

conhost.exe

Signature

  • Status: Signature verified.
  • Serial: 330000023241FB59996DCC4DFF000000000232
  • Thumbprint: FF82BC38E1DA5E596DF374C53E3617F7EDA36B06
  • Issuer: CN=Microsoft Windows Production PCA 2011, O=Microsoft Corporation, L=Redmond, S=Washington, C=US
  • Subject: CN=Microsoft Windows, O=Microsoft Corporation, L=Redmond, S=Washington, C=US

File Metadata

  • Original Filename: waitfor.exe
  • Product Name: Microsoft Windows Operating System
  • Company Name: Microsoft Corporation
  • File Version: 10.0.18362.1 (WinBuild.160101.0800)
  • Product Version: 10.0.18362.1
  • Language: English (United States)
  • Legal Copyright: Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

Possible Misuse

The following table contains possible examples of waitfor.exe being misused. While waitfor.exe is not inherently malicious, its legitimate functionality can be abused for malicious purposes.

Source Source File Example License
signature-base apt_oilrig.yar $x2 = “wss.Run "powershell.exe " & Chr(34) & "& {waitfor haha /T 2}" & Chr(34), 0” fullword ascii CC BY-NC 4.0

Additional Info*

*The information below is copied from MicrosoftDocs, which is maintained by Microsoft. Available under CC BY 4.0 license.


waitfor

Sends or waits for a signal on a system. This command is used to synchronize computers across a network.

Syntax

waitfor [/s <computer> [/u [<domain>\]<user> [/p [<password>]]]] /si <signalname>
waitfor [/t <timeout>] <signalname>

Parameters

Parameter Description
/s <computer> Specifies the name or IP address of a remote computer (don’t use backslashes). The default is the local computer. This parameter applies to all files and folders specified in the command. If you don’t use this parameter, the signal is broadcast to all the systems in a domain. If you do use this parameter, the signal is sent only to the specified system.
/u [<domain>]<user> Runs the script using the credentials of the specified user account. By default, waitfor uses the current user’s credentials.
/p [\<password>] Specifies the password of the user account that is specified in the /u parameter.
/si Sends the specified signal across the network. This parameter also lets you manually activate a signal.
/t <timeout> Specifies the number of seconds to wait for a signal. By default, waitfor waits indefinitely.
<signalname> Specifies the signal that waitfor waits for or sends. This parameter isn’t case-sensitive and can’t exceed 225 characters. Valid characters include a-z, A-Z, 0-9, and the ASCII extended character set (128-255).
/? Displays help at the command prompt.
Remarks
  • You can run multiple instances of waitfor on a single computer, but each instance of waitfor must wait for a different signal. Only one instance of waitfor can wait for a given signal on a given computer.

  • Computers can only receive signals if they are in the same domain as the computer sending the signal.

  • You can use this command when you test software builds. For example, the compiling computer can send a signal to several computers running waitfor after the compile has completed successfully. On receipt of the signal, the batch file that includes waitfor can instruct the computers to immediately start installing software or running tests on the compiled build.

Examples

To wait until the espresso\build007 signal is received, type:

waitfor espresso\build007

By default, waitfor waits indefinitely for a signal.

To wait 10 seconds for the espresso\compile007 signal to be received before timing out, type:

waitfor /t 10 espresso\build007

To manually activate the espresso\build007 signal, type:

waitfor /si espresso\build007

Additional References


MIT License. Copyright (c) 2020-2021 Strontic.