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Message-ID: <20030419132433.14589.qmail@www.securityfocus.com>
Date: 19 Apr 2003 13:24:33 -0000
From: <seclab@...aut.ac.ir>
To: bugtraq@...urityfocus.com
Subject: Authentication flaw in microsoft SMB protocol
Detailed information:
http://seclab.ce.aut.ac.ir/vreport.htm
Summary
=======
Microsoft uses SMB Protocol for “File and Printer sharing service” in all
versions of Windows. Upon accessing a network resource, NTLM
Authentication is used to authenticate the client on the server. When a
logged-in user requests for a network share on the server, Windows
automatically sends the encrypted hashed password of the logged-in
username to the target SMB server before prompting for password. Although
the hashed password is not sent in plaintext format, and it is encrypted
by the server challenge, a malicious SMB Server could use this information
to authenticate on the client machine and in many cases, gain full control
over the shared objects of the client such as C$, etc.
Vulnerable Systems
==================
All versions of Windows including:
Windows XP (confirmed in the lab)
Windows 2000 server/professional (confirmed in the lab)
Windows .NET server (vulnerable but not confirmed)
Windows 9x/Me (vulnerable but not confirmed)
Detail
======
SMB, which stands for Server Message Block, is a protocol for sharing
files, printers, serial ports, and communications abstractions such as
named pipes and mail slots between computers. Microsoft uses this Protocol
along with NTLM Authentication protocol to provide a so-called “User-level
file and printer sharing” service in various versions of Windows.
When a logged-in user tries to connect to a remote machine network shares,
for example \\server\myshare, windows automatically sends the login
information of the logged-in user to the SMB server before asking any
username or password from the user. At this step, if the authentication
fails, Windows pops up a window and asks for a username and password.
The “login information”, which is sent to the SMB server, contains neither
the plaintext format of the password, nor the hashed password, which is
stored on the SAM. In fact, the client encrypts the hashed password of the
user by the challenge it receives from the server and then sends this data
to the server. This data is called the NT/LM-Response. Server uses the
locally stored hashed password and uses same way to encrypt the hashed
password. If the result is equal to the Response sent by the client, then
the authentication is successful. This is the way NTLM authentication
works.
It is obvious that sniffing the Network and extracting the Challenge and
the NT-Response could not help us to find the plaintext passwords. Some
tools such as L0phtCrack use a brute-force attack to find the plaintext
password. But, this way is only suitable for short and not complicated
passwords. Also, it’s a time-consuming procedure even for short passwords.
As mentioned earlier, windows by default sends the NT/LM-Response of the
logged-in username to the SMB server before asking for any
username/password. At the first glance, it does not arise any security
risk, but by using a slightly tricky method, a malicious SMB server could
use this information to authenticate on the client machine.
The following procedure illustrates the way an Attacking Server uses to
gain access to a Victim Client. Although in this procedure the attack
starts by the client request for a network share, it is possible to force
the client to initiate this connection. As an example, by sending an HTML
email which contains an object with the SRC attribute pointed to a
resource on the server, the victim machine will automatically initiates
the procedure. This procedure contains 10 steps:
1. The client tries to connect to the Server. It sends a request to
the attacking SMB server.
2. Attacking SMB server receives this request, but it does not send
its own generated challenge to the client, instead it sends a request for
the attacking client.
3. The attacking SMB client sends a request to the victim SMB server.
4. The victim SMB server sends a challenge to the attacking SMB
client.
5. Attacking SMB client sends this challenge to the Attacking SMB
server, and it sends it back to the victim client.
6. The victim client receives the challenge. It encrypts the
password, using the received challenge and sends it back to the Attacking
Server.
7. The Attacking server sends this response to the Attacking client.
8. The attacking client sends the received response back to the
victim server.
9. The victim server receives the response.
10. A successful authentication occurs on the victim. At this moment,
the Attacking client has control over the victim machine.
The subtle idea behind this procedure is to request a challenge from the
victim server and send it back to victim client whenever the victim
requests a connection. By this way, the attacking machine could gain the
NT/LM response of a specified user, and it sends it back to the victim to
authenticate on victim machine.
Although this procedure is a bit complicated and exploitation requires
full knowledge about the NTLM and SMB protocols, Open-Source
implementations of SMB protocol make exploitation much easier. (Thanks to
Samba).
Points
1. The attacking machine gains a level of access as equal as the
logged-in user privileges on the victim machine.
2. The exploitation will fail, if the victim SMB ports (139/445) are
closed, or the victim is behind a firewall.
3. This vulnerability is not limited to ‘File sharing service’ and is
most probably exploitable in various RPC services, which use NT/LM
authentication.
Solution
========
The best way to fix this vulnerability is that the SMB client refuses the
challenges (nonce) which are equal to challenges recently sent by SMB
server.
Authors
=======
This vulnerability has been found and exploited by Salman Niksefat
(salman@...ux.ce.aut.ac.ir) and Haamed Gheibi (haamed@...ux.ce.aut.ac.ir),
B.S students of computer engineering at the university of Amirkabir,
computer department, network security lab.
Exploit
=======
We will publish the exploit code after a patch be created by software
vendor.
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