Apache Tomcat 7.0.39 Remote Code Execution

2014.09.10
Credit: Pierre Ernst
Risk: High
Local: No
Remote: Yes
CWE: N/A


CVSS Base Score: 6.8/10
Impact Subscore: 6.4/10
Exploitability Subscore: 8.6/10
Exploit range: Remote
Attack complexity: Medium
Authentication: No required
Confidentiality impact: Partial
Integrity impact: Partial
Availability impact: Partial

CVE-2013-4444 Remote Code Execution Severity: Important Vendor: The Apache Software Foundation Versions Affected: - - Apache Tomcat 7.0.0 to 7.0.39 Description: In very limited circumstances, it was possible for an attacker to upload a malicious JSP to a Tomcat server and then trigger the execution of that JSP. While Remote Code Execution would normally be viewed as a critical vulnerability, the circumstances under which this is possible are, in the view of the Tomcat security team, sufficiently limited that this vulnerability is viewed as important. For this attack to succeed all of the following requirements must be met: a) Using Oracle Java 1.7.0 update 25 or earlier (or any other Java implementation where java.io.File is vulnerable to null byte injection). b) A web application must be deployed to a vulnerable version of Tomcat (see previous section). c) The web application must use the Servlet 3.0 File Upload feature. d) A file location within a deployed web application must be writeable by the user the Tomcat process is running as. The Tomcat security documentation recommends against this. e) A custom listener for JMX connections (e.g. the JmxRemoteListener that is not enabled by default) must be configured and be able to load classes from Tomcat's common class loader (i.e. the custom JMX listener must be placed in Tomcat's lib directory) f) The custom JMX listener must be bound to an address other than localhost for a remote attack (it is bound to localhost by default). If the custom JMX listener is bound to localhost, a local attack will still be possible. Note that requirements b) and c) may be replaced with the following requirement: g) A web application is deployed that uses Apache Commons File Upload 1.2.1 or earlier. In this case a similar vulnerability may exist on any Servlet container, not just Apache Tomcat. Mitigation: This vulnerability may be mitigated by using any one of the following mitigations: - - Upgrade to Oracle Java 1.7.0 update 40 or later (or any other Java implementation where java.io.File is not vulnerable to null byte injection). - - Use OS file permissions to prevent the process Tomcat is running as from writing to any location within a deployed application. - - Disable any custom JMX listeners - - Upgrade to Apache Tomcat 7.0.40 or later Credit: This issue was identified by Pierre Ernst of the VMware Security Engineering, Communications & Response group (vSECR) and reported to the Tomcat security team via the Pivotal security team. References: [1] http://tomcat.apache.org/security-7.html

References:

http://tomcat.apache.org/security-7.html
http://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/2014/Sep/34


Vote for this issue:
50%
50%


 

Thanks for you vote!


 

Thanks for you comment!
Your message is in quarantine 48 hours.

Comment it here.


(*) - required fields.  
{{ x.nick }} | Date: {{ x.ux * 1000 | date:'yyyy-MM-dd' }} {{ x.ux * 1000 | date:'HH:mm' }} CET+1
{{ x.comment }}

Copyright 2024, cxsecurity.com

 

Back to Top