User Mode vs Kernel Mode: Privilege Rings and the Boundary

By Debraj Basak·Jun 18, 2026 · Updated Jun 20, 2026·11 min readWindows Internals

Objective: Understand the architectural separation between user mode (Ring 3) and kernel mode (Ring 0) on Windows — how Intel hardware enforces it, how the Windows OS layers process isolation and the system call dispatch path on top, and why this boundary is the central battleground for rootkits, EDR, and modern kernel hardening.


1. Why Rings Exist — The Hardware Contract

Intel x86/x64 CPUs define four hardware privilege levels — called rings — numbered 0 (most privileged) through 3 (least privileged). The currently executing privilege level is encoded in the low two bits of the CS segment register and is referred to as the Current Privilege Level (CPL). Every memory access, every instruction fetch, and every attempt at a privileged instruction is checked against this value by the CPU itself, before any OS code runs.

Windows collapses Intel’s four rings into two:

FeatureUser ModeKernel Mode
Ring / CPLRing 3 (CPL = 3)Ring 0 (CPL = 0)
Memory accessUser VA onlyFull kernel + user VA
Privileged instructionsFaults with #GPAllowed
Address space isolationPer-process privateSingle shared VA across all drivers
Crash blast radiusProcess terminationBug check (BSOD)
Entry mechanismNative executionSYSCALL / interrupt / exception

Rings 1 and 2 exist in hardware but are unused by Windows — using only Ring 0 and Ring 3 maps cleanly to the “supervisor vs. user” model and is portable to architectures (ARM64, older RISC) that don’t expose intermediate levels. The instant Ring 3 code attempts to execute LGDT, LIDT, RDMSR, WRMSR, HLT, CLI, STI, or any I/O instruction outside its IOPB, the CPU raises a General Protection Fault (#GP) and the kernel terminates the offending thread.

This single hardware guarantee — CPL is checked by silicon, not software — is what makes the user/kernel boundary trustworthy in the first place.


Hierarchy diagram showing Intel's four privilege rings with Ring 0 (kernel) and Ring 3 (user) used by Windows, Rings 1 and 2 unused, and the CPU's CPL enforcing the boundary.
Windows collapses Intel’s four hardware rings into two; the CPU’s Current Privilege Level field in CS enforces the boundary in silicon.

2. User Mode: The Sandboxed World

When Windows launches an application, it creates a process with its own private virtual address space, its own handle table, and a security token. On x64, the user-mode half of the address space spans 0x00000000000000000x00007FFFFFFFFFFF (128 TB). Anything above that canonical boundary is kernel territory and is unmapped from user mode page tables (especially under KVA Shadow).

User-mode code can:

  • Allocate memory in its own VA via VirtualAlloc.
  • Open handles to kernel objects through documented APIs.
  • Spawn threads and processes via the Win32 subsystem (csrss.exe).

User-mode code cannot:

  • Read or write another process’s memory without explicit handle access.
  • Touch kernel VA, modify page tables, or read MSRs directly.
  • Service interrupts, install drivers, or hook the IDT/GDT.

Every meaningful operation that touches hardware, files, networking, or kernel objects must therefore traverse the user/kernel boundary through a system call.


3. Kernel Mode: The Shared Kingdom

In contrast to user mode’s per-process isolation, all kernel-mode code shares a single virtual address space. ntoskrnl.exe, the HAL, file system drivers, network stack drivers, and every third-party driver loaded on the system all coexist in the same address space, on the same privilege level, with no memory protection between them.

RegionPurpose
Non-paged poolKernel allocations that must remain resident (DPC/ISR code, kernel objects)
Paged poolKernel allocations that can be paged out
System PTE regionKernel-managed page table entries for I/O mapping
HAL / driver image rangeLoaded driver .text/.data sections

A buggy driver writing to the wrong pointer can corrupt another driver’s structures or the kernel’s own state. A crash in any kernel component triggers a bug check (BSOD) because, unlike user mode, there is no isolation boundary to contain the damage. This is also exactly why attackers want Ring 0: once executing in kernel mode, malicious code has the same authority over the OS as the OS itself.


4. Crossing the Boundary — The SYSCALL Path

Every Win32 API that touches the kernel eventually reaches an ntdll.dll stub. On x64 those stubs all have the same shape:

; ntdll!NtReadFile (representative)
mov   r10, rcx              ; preserve arg1 (RCX is clobbered by SYSCALL)
mov   eax, 0x06             ; syscall number (build-specific; illustrative)
syscall                     ; user -> kernel transition
ret

The SYSCALL instruction is the choreography of the boundary crossing. The CPU performs all of the following atomically:

StepCPU action
1Saves user RIP into RCX
2Saves user RFLAGS into R11
3Masks RFLAGS per IA32_FMASK (MSR 0xC0000084) — clears IF so interrupts are off at kernel entry
4Loads new CS/SS selectors from IA32_STAR (MSR 0xC0000081)
5Loads RIP from IA32_LSTAR (MSR 0xC0000082) — points to nt!KiSystemCall64
6Transitions CPL from 3 to 0

From here, control is in Windows. The kernel-side dispatch chain is:

FunctionRole
nt!KiSystemCall64Entry point loaded from IA32_LSTAR. Executes swapgs to swap user GS for kernel GS, switches to the kernel stack, allocates and populates a _KTRAP_FRAME with the saved user-mode register state. With KVA Shadow (KPTI) enabled, the variant KiSystemCall64Shadow is used to swap page tables first.
nt!KiSystemServiceUserLocates the current _KTHREAD via GS:[0x188] and sets KTHREAD.PreviousMode = UserMode (1) so the kernel knows arguments came from Ring 3 and must be probed.
nt!KiSystemServiceStartSplits the syscall number in EAX into a table identifier (high bits) and a service index (low bits).
nt!KiSystemServiceRepeatSelects KeServiceDescriptorTable (Nt* executive calls) or KeServiceDescriptorTableShadow (Win32k GUI calls), validates the argument count, and dispatches.
Service routine (e.g. nt!NtReadFile)Validates user pointers (ProbeForRead / ProbeForWrite) and performs the work.
SYSRETRestores RIP from RCX, RFLAGS from R11, transitions CPL from 0 back to 3, and the caller returns from ntdll.

The key takeaway for defenders: every user-mode action eventually appears in EAX as a syscall number — and EDR products that hook only in user space (in ntdll) can be bypassed by re-implementing this exact stub in attacker code (direct/indirect syscalls).


Flow diagram tracing a system call from Win32 API through ntdll stub, SYSCALL instruction, IA32_LSTAR MSR, KiSystemCall64, SSDT lookup, and finally the kernel service routine.
Every user-mode kernel request follows this exact dispatch chain — EAX carries the syscall number across the Ring 3 to Ring 0 boundary.

5. The SSDT — Routing Calls Inside the Kernel

The System Service Descriptor Table (SSDT) is the array of function pointers that turns EAX into a kernel routine address.

SymbolDescription
KeServiceDescriptorTableExported; primary SSDT for Nt* executive system calls
KeServiceDescriptorTableShadowNot exported; adds the Win32k.sys GUI calls used by threads with a Win32 subsystem context
ServiceTableField inside each descriptor — pointer to an array of encoded function offsets (on x64 these are relative offsets right-shifted by 4)
NumberOfServicesCount of valid entries

Patching SSDT entries to redirect kernel calls was the classic 32-bit rootkit technique (and the canonical kernel hook for early HIPS products). On x64, PatchGuard (KPP) periodically verifies the SSDT and several other critical structures; modification triggers Bug Check 0x109CRITICAL_STRUCTURE_CORRUPTION.


6. Key Kernel Structures at the Boundary

The kernel maintains per-CPU and per-thread state that defenders inspect to understand mode transitions.

// Conceptual layout — verify offsets against your build's symbols.
typedef struct _KPCR {
    // ...
    struct _KPRCB Prcb;        // at +0x180 on x64; embedded
} KPCR, *PKPCR;

typedef struct _KPRCB {
    // ...
    struct _KTHREAD *CurrentThread;   // GS:[0x188] in kernel mode
} KPRCB, *PKPRCB;

typedef struct _KTHREAD {
    // ...
    UCHAR           PreviousMode;     // 0 = KernelMode, 1 = UserMode
    PKTRAP_FRAME    TrapFrame;        // saved register state from SYSCALL
} KTHREAD, *PKTHREAD;

PreviousMode is one of the most consequential bytes in the system: kernel routines branch on it to decide whether to probe and capture caller-supplied pointers (user mode) or trust them directly (kernel mode). Bugs in that check have been the root cause of multiple Windows LPE CVEs.

Inspect any of these live in WinDbg on a kernel debug target:

0: kd> rdmsr 0xC0000082          ; IA32_LSTAR -> KiSystemCall64
0: kd> dg cs                     ; show CS selector + CPL
0: kd> dt nt!_KPCR @$pcr
0: kd> dt nt!_KTHREAD @$thread PreviousMode TrapFrame
0: kd> dt nt!_KTRAP_FRAME @$thread->TrapFrame
0: kd> dps KeServiceDescriptorTable L4

7. Hardening the Boundary

Microsoft has spent two decades hardening the user/kernel boundary in layers. Each mechanism closes a class of attacks against Ring 0.

MechanismWhat it enforces
PatchGuard (KPP)Periodic integrity checks on SSDT, IDT, GDT, KPCR, MSRs, and kernel code sections. Tampering triggers Bug Check 0x109.
Driver Signature Enforcement (DSE)All kernel drivers must be signed. Enforced by ci.dll. Disabling DSE (bcdedit /set testsigning on) is a strong adversary indicator.
Secure BootUEFI-rooted trust chain prevents unsigned bootloaders/drivers from loading before Windows starts.
HVCI (Memory Integrity)A VTL1 hypervisor enforces W^X on kernel pages — unsigned code cannot execute even from Ring 0.
KVA Shadow (KPTI)User page tables contain only minimal kernel mappings; full mapping is installed only while CPL = 0. Mitigates Meltdown-class speculative leaks.
Microsoft Vulnerable Driver BlocklistMaintained list of known-abused drivers; enforced by HVCI/CI.

Together these turn Ring 0 from “anything goes once you’re in” into a far more constrained environment — and explain why modern attackers gravitate toward Bring Your Own Vulnerable Driver (BYOVD) as their cleanest path to kernel code execution.


Hierarchy diagram showing five Windows hardening mechanisms — HVCI, PatchGuard, DSE, KVA Shadow, and the Vulnerable Driver Blocklist — each targeting the Ring 0 attack surface.
Microsoft’s layered kernel hardening forces modern attackers toward BYOVD as the remaining practical path to Ring 0 code execution.

8. Common Attacker Techniques

The boundary is a target precisely because Ring 0 sits underneath every defensive product. Attackers care about three categories of abuse:

TechniqueDescription
Direct / indirect syscallsRebuild the ntdll stub (mov r10, rcx; mov eax, <N>; syscall) inside the implant to bypass user-mode hooks placed by EDR.
BYOVDLoad a legitimately signed but vulnerable driver, then exploit it to gain arbitrary Ring 0 read/write — used to disable EDR, blank tokens, or clear callbacks.
Kernel exploitation (LPE)Exploit a kernel vulnerability (write-what-where, type confusion, double-fetch on user pointers when PreviousMode == UserMode) to escalate Ring 3 → Ring 0.
SSDT hooking (legacy)Patch entries in KeServiceDescriptorTable to intercept syscalls — blocked on x64 by PatchGuard but still relevant for 32-bit forensics.
DKOM (Direct Kernel Object Manipulation)Unlink _EPROCESS entries from ActiveProcessLinks to hide processes; clear PsActiveProcessHead linkages.
Callback removalWalk PsSetCreateProcessNotifyRoutine / PsSetLoadImageNotifyRoutine arrays and null EDR callbacks.
PreviousMode overwriteSet KTHREAD.PreviousMode = KernelMode (0) to make subsequent Nt* calls skip user-pointer validation.

9. Defensive Strategies & Detection

The fact that all roads cross the boundary is a defender’s leverage: even attackers using direct syscalls leave telemetry at driver load, privilege use, and kernel object access layers.

Sysmon coverage

Event IDNameRelevance
1Process CreateParent/child + command line; catches bcdedit, sc.exe create … type= kernel
6Driver LoadedFires on every kernel driver load; fields include ImageLoaded, Hashes, Signed, Signature — primary BYOVD signal
7Image LoadedDLL loads; detect ntdll.dll loaded from non-standard paths
10Process AccessCross-process handle opens with sensitive GrantedAccess masks (precursor to injection)
255Sysmon ErrorTampering with the Sysmon kernel driver may surface here

Windows audit policies

PolicyEvent IDsDetects
Audit Sensitive Privilege Use4673Use of SeLoadDriverPrivilege — required to load any kernel driver
Audit Security System Extension4697, 7045New service / kernel driver installed
Audit Kernel Object4656, 4663Access to kernel objects via SACL-tagged handles
Audit Policy Change4719Audit-policy tampering (a common pre-attack step)

High-value ETW providers

  • Microsoft-Windows-Kernel-Process — process/thread/image events at the kernel boundary.
  • Microsoft-Windows-Kernel-File / Microsoft-Windows-Kernel-Registry — kernel-side file and registry ops, useful for catching driver-stage persistence.
  • Microsoft-Windows-Threat-Intelligence (ETWTI) — emits high-fidelity events for ReadProcessMemory, WriteProcessMemory, MapViewOfSection, QueueUserApc. Consumption requires a PPL or kernel consumer; verify provider availability on your build with logman query providers.

Sigma — BYOVD pattern

title: Suspicious Kernel Driver Load - BYOVD Pattern
logsource:
  product: windows
  category: driver_load
detection:
  selection:
    EventID: 6
    Signed: 'false'
  filter_legit_path:
    ImageLoaded|startswith:
      - 'C:\Windows\System32\drivers\'
      - 'C:\Windows\SysWOW64\drivers\'
  condition: selection and not filter_legit_path
fields:
  - ImageLoaded
  - Hashes
  - Signature
  - SignatureStatus
level: high

Sigma — SeLoadDriverPrivilege exercised by non-system principal

title: SeLoadDriverPrivilege Use by Non-System Account
logsource:
  product: windows
  service: security
detection:
  selection:
    EventID: 4673
    PrivilegeList|contains: 'SeLoadDriverPrivilege'
  filter_machine_accounts:
    SubjectUserName|endswith: '$'
  condition: selection and not filter_machine_accounts
level: medium

Hardening checklist

  • Enable HVCI / Memory Integrity (HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\DeviceGuard).
  • Enable Secure Boot in UEFI.
  • Apply the Microsoft Vulnerable Driver Blocklist (HVCI-enforced).
  • Verify Meltdown mitigations / KVA Shadow via Get-SpeculationControlSettings.
  • Alert on bcdedit /set testsigning on and on driver loads where Signed=false or hashes match loldrivers.io.
  • Enable Kernel DMA Protection for laptops with Thunderbolt/USB4.
  • Limit SeLoadDriverPrivilege assignment and monitor every use via Event 4673.

10. Tools for Boundary Analysis

ToolDescriptionLink
WinDbgKernel debugger; inspect _KPCR, _KTHREAD, _KTRAP_FRAME, MSRs, SSDTaka.ms/windbg
SysmonProcess/driver/handle telemetry — EIDs 1/6/7/10sysinternals.com
Process HackerView loaded drivers, handles, tokens, KPP-safe inspectionprocesshacker.sourceforge.io
Process MonitorFile/registry/thread activity at the boundarysysinternals.com
Volatility 3Memory forensics; walk _EPROCESS, hidden processes via DKOMvolatilityfoundation.org
DriverView / DriverQueryEnumerate loaded kernel drivers and signing statenirsoft.net
ETW / logmanEnumerate and capture kernel-mode ETW providersbuilt-in
loldrivers.ioCatalog of known-vulnerable signed driversloldrivers.io

11. MITRE ATT&CK Mapping

TechniqueMITRE IDDetection
RootkitT1014Volatility scans for unlinked _EPROCESS; PatchGuard bug checks 0x109
Process InjectionT1055Sysmon EID 8/10; ETWTI WriteProcessMemory / QueueUserApc
Exploitation for Privilege EscalationT1068Bug check telemetry, unusual PreviousMode transitions, EDR kernel callbacks
Create or Modify System Process: ServiceT1543.003Security EID 4697, System EID 7045, Sysmon EID 6
Impair DefensesT1562.001Driver loads correlated with subsequent loss of EDR telemetry; EID 4673 with SeLoadDriverPrivilege
Exploitation for Defense Evasion (BYOVD)T1211Sysmon EID 6 with unsigned driver or known-vulnerable hash; loldrivers.io match

Summary

  • The user/kernel boundary is enforced by silicon — CPL in CS — not by software, which is what makes it trustworthy.
  • Windows uses only Ring 0 and Ring 3; user mode runs in a per-process private VA, kernel mode runs in a single shared VA where any bug is a BSOD.
  • Every user→kernel transition flows through SYSCALLIA32_LSTARKiSystemCall64 → SSDT dispatch, leaving EAX and KTHREAD.PreviousMode as the canonical fingerprints.
  • Modern hardening — PatchGuard, DSE, HVCI, KVA Shadow, and the vulnerable driver blocklist — has pushed attackers toward BYOVD and direct syscalls.
  • Defenders watch the boundary through Sysmon EID 6, Security EID 4673 (SeLoadDriverPrivilege), ETWTI, and kernel-callback EDR telemetry — every Ring 0 attack eventually touches one of them.

Related Tutorials

References

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