GridinSoft Threat Intelligence

System.DirectoryServices.dll file report

Under review File reputation report
MD5 e61418e77cf4b0b77ab3d808efb73548
Latest seen 2025-12-03 23:03:25 (5 months ago)
First seen 2020-10-15 13:45:33 (5 years ago)
Size 345 KB

Why it matters

Evidence available for this file

Detection

No final classification is available yet.

Timeline

First seen 2020-10-15 13:45:33 (5 years ago); latest analysis 2025-12-03 23:03:25 (5 months ago).

Publisher context

Company metadata: Microsoft Corporation. Product metadata: Microsoft® .NET Core.

Observed locations

ThreatInfo has seen this file in user or system paths listed below. Unexpected locations increase the need for local verification.

Recommended action

What to do next

  1. Use the hash and metadata below to verify the exact file identity.
  2. Review publisher, signature, paths, and PE details for inconsistencies.
  3. Run a local scan if the file appears unexpectedly or starts with Windows.

System.DirectoryServices.dll is a Windows file recorded in the ThreatInfo database. It is associated with Microsoft® .NET Core. The reported company name is Microsoft Corporation. The current detection status is Undefined, based on the latest analysis from 2025-12-03 23:03:25 (5 months ago).

ThreatInfo does not have a final classification for this file yet. Use the technical details below to compare the hash, size, signature, and observed locations with the copy found on your device.

Product Name: Microsoft® .NET Core
Company Name: Microsoft Corporation
MD5: e61418e77cf4b0b77ab3d808efb73548
Size: 345 KB
First Published: 2020-10-15 13:45:33 (5 years ago)
Latest Published: 2025-12-03 23:03:25 (5 months ago)
Status: Undefined (on last analysis)
Analysis Date: 2025-12-03 23:03:25 (5 months ago)
%programfiles%

ThreatInfo has observed System.DirectoryServices.dll in the locations listed above. Files found in temporary folders, user profile folders, startup locations, or unusual application directories should be reviewed more carefully than files installed under a known program directory.

Windows 10 90.7%
Windows 7 6.3%
Windows 8.1 1.9%
Windows Vista 0.4%
Windows Server 2008 R2 0.4%
Windows Server 2012 R2 0.4%

The most common operating system signal for System.DirectoryServices.dll is Windows 10 with 90.7% of observed hits. If your system differs from the common profile, check whether the file was introduced by a specific installer, archive, or removable device.

System.DirectoryServices.dll is identified as pe for 32-bit systems. The subsystem is Windows CUI. PE header values are useful for triage, especially when they do not match the expected publisher, product, or release timeline.

Format pe
Architecture 32-bit
Subsystem Windows CUI
Entry point 0x0005788e
Image base 0x00400000

.NET Info:

MVID: 30e303fe-a3a6-411d-aca9-66c53e62968b
Typelib ID: 00020404-0000-0000-c000-000000000046

PE Sections:

Sections 3
Raw data 352768

Section layout highlights raw-size concentration, repeated names, packer markers, and hashes that can be compared across related samples.

.text 350720 bytes · 99.4% of section data
MD5 b072f75e2f6f12499ed4da668d2e7bdf
.rsrc 1536 bytes · 0.4% of section data
MD5 9f97b6b83c2016bb298deed8d30e7902
.reloc 512 bytes · 0.1% of section data
MD5 a04dc79c9d84e8f0303c1fa9fff4934c

PE section names and hashes can reveal packing, injected resources, or unusual build artifacts. Sections with uncommon names, very large raw data, or hashes that differ from a trusted copy deserve additional review.

Report conclusion

This file is still under review

ThreatInfo has not assigned a final verdict yet. Compare the file hash, location, signature, and publisher before trusting the file on a production system.

Scan with GridinSoft Anti-Malware Use a local scan if the file origin or behavior is unclear. Check this hash on VirusTotal

Recommended next steps

  • Compare the local file MD5 with e61418e77cf4b0b77ab3d808efb73548.
  • Check the file path, publisher, and signature against the details in this report.
  • Run a GridinSoft scan if the source, path, or behavior looks unusual.