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Message-ID: <4536A2F2.2020902@security-assessment.com>
Date: Thu, 19 Oct 2006 10:56:02 +1300
From: Adam Boileau <adam.boileau@...urity-assessment.com>
To: bugtraq@...urityfocus.com,  full-disclosure@...ts.grok.org.uk
Subject: Security-Assessment.com Advisory: Asterisk remote
	heap overflow

========================================================================
= Asterisk - chan_skinny Remote Unauthenticated Heap Overflow
=
= Vendor Website:
= http://www.asterisk.org
=
= Affected Version:
=  All 1.2-branch releases prior to and including 1.2.12.1
=  All 1.0-branch releases prior to and including 1.0.12
=
= Not Affected:
=  All 1.4-branch beta releases (1.4.0-beta1, 1.4.0-beta2)
=
= Public disclosure on Oct 19, 2006
========================================================================

== Overview ==

Asterisk is "The Opensource PBX", a popular software telephony server.

The Asterisk Skinny channel driver for Cisco SCCP phones chan_skinny.so)
incorrectly validates a length value in the packet header. An integer
wrap-around leads to heap overwrite, and arbitrary remote code execution
as root.

== Details ==

The function 'static int get_input(struct skinnysession *s)' in
chan_skinny.c incorrectly validates a user supplied length in the packet
header. In the code below, four bytes of data are read from the socket,
cast to a signed integer, and assigned to dlen. If dlen is between -1
and -8 then (dlen + 8) will integer wrap to be greater than zero, but
less than sizeof(s->inbuf) for the purposes of this comparison.

Next, dlen + 4 is passed to read() as the maximum number of bytes to
write to s->inbuf+4. Read() takes an unsigned value, so dlen is
interpreted as a very large number. For example, a value of -6 is
interpreted as 0xfffffffa bytes. This instructs read() to write beyond
the allocated 1000 byte length of the buffer s->inbuf.

Code asterisk-1.2.12.1/channels/chan_skinny.c lines 2860-2870
----------------
res = read(s->fd, s->inbuf, 4);     // <- integer read from attacker
if (res != 4) {
  ast_log(LOG_WARNING, "Skinny Client sent less data than expected.\n");
  return -1;
}
dlen = letohl(*(int *)s->inbuf);        // <- input 0xfffffffa
                                        //  interpreted as signed
if (dlen+8 > sizeof(s->inbuf))          // <- integer wrap to +2

  dlen = sizeof(s->inbuf) - 8;          //  bypasses this check
}
*(int *)s->inbuf = htolel(dlen);        // casting just for amusement
res = read(s->fd, s->inbuf+4, dlen+4);  /* <- dlen now unsigned again
                                          *  permitting read() to write
                                          * up to 0xfffffffa bytes off
                                          * the end of s->inbuf
                                          */
----------------


== Exploitation ==

An attacker who can connect to the Asterisk server SCCP "Skinny" port
(by default 2000/tcp) can attack the vulnerable function prior to
registering as a configured Skinny phone, permitting pre-authentication
remote compromise.

Once the initial length header value in the packet performs an
integer-wraparound an attacker can overflow off the end of the
malloc()ed input buffer, and into heap space above it. Exploitation is
possible via standard heap-overflow malloc-unlink-macro technique[1] on
glibc versions prior to 2.3.5. On systems with newer glibc, a more
sophisticated exploitation method is necessary due to the improved
validation of malloc's internal heap management linked lists. Brett
Moore's work[2] on bypassing similar restrictions in WinXPSP2 is
instructive.

Our proof-of-concept exploit uses vanilla malloc-unlink() to overwrite a
GOT entry to point execution back into our buffer, and executes
Metasploit port-binding shellcode.

== Solutions ==

 - Disable the chan_skinny module if it is not required.
 - Firewall port 2000/tcp from untrusted networks.
 - Install the vendor supplied upgrades:
	1.0-branch: Upgrade to 1.0.12 or later
	1.2-branch: Upgrade to 1.2.13 or later

== Credit ==

Discovered and advised to Digium 17th October, 2006 by Adam Boileau of
Security-Assessment.com.

Security-Assessment.com commends Digium on their extremely rapid
response, releasing an updated version within two days of receiving our
vulnerability report.

== References ==

[1] "Advanced Doug Lea's Malloc Exploits" by jp
  http://doc.bughunter.net/buffer-overflow/advanced-malloc-exploits.html
[2] "Exploiting Freelist[0] On Windows XP Service Pack 2" by Brett Moore
  http://www.security-assessment.com/technical/

== About Security-Assessment.com ==

Security-Assessment.com is Australasia's leading team of Information
Security consultants specialising in providing high quality Information
Security services to clients throughout the Asia Pacific region. Our
clients include some of the largest globally recognised companies in
areas such as finance, telecommunications, broadcasting, legal and
government. Our aim is to provide the very best independent advice and
a high level of technical expertise while creating long and lasting
professional relationships with our clients.

Security-Assessment.com is committed to security research and
development, and its team continues to identify and responsibly publish
vulnerabilities in public and private software vendor's products.
Members of the Security-Assessment.com R&D team are globally recognised
through their release of whitepapers and presentations related to new
security research.

Security-Assessment.com is an Endorsed Commonwealth Government of
Australia supplier and sits on the Australian Government
Attorney-General's Department Critical Infrastructure Project panel.
We are certified by both Visa and MasterCard under their Payment
Card Industry Data Security Standard Programs.

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