0day.today - Biggest Exploit Database in the World.
Things you should know about 0day.today:
Administration of this site uses the official contacts. Beware of impostors!
- We use one main domain: http://0day.today
- Most of the materials is completely FREE
- If you want to purchase the exploit / get V.I.P. access or pay for any other service,
you need to buy or earn GOLD
Administration of this site uses the official contacts. Beware of impostors!
We DO NOT use Telegram or any messengers / social networks!
Please, beware of scammers!
Please, beware of scammers!
- Read the [ agreement ]
- Read the [ Submit ] rules
- Visit the [ faq ] page
- [ Register ] profile
- Get [ GOLD ]
- If you want to [ sell ]
- If you want to [ buy ]
- If you lost [ Account ]
- Any questions [ admin@0day.today ]
- Authorisation page
- Registration page
- Restore account page
- FAQ page
- Contacts page
- Publishing rules
- Agreement page
Mail:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Telegram:
We DO NOT use Telegram or any messengers / social networks!
You can contact us by:
Mail:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Telegram:
We DO NOT use Telegram or any messengers / social networks!
Google Android - RKP Information Disclosure via s2-remapping Physical Ranges Exploit
Source: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/project-zero/issues/detail?id=982 As part of Samsung KNOX, Samsung phones include a security hypervisor called RKP (Real-time Kernel Protection), running in EL2. This hypervisor is meant to ensure that the HLOS kernel running in EL1 remains protected from exploits and aims to prevent privilege escalation attacks by "shielding" certain data structures within the hypervisor. In order to protect the information processed and stored within RKP (i.e., RKP's heap and stack or the current control-flow protection key), the physical ranges in which RKP and "physmap" are located are unmapped from the stage 2 translation table upon initialization of RKP. This prevents an attacker in EL1 from accessing any of these memory regions, as such an attempt would trigger an s2 translation fault. However, RKP provides commands which can be used in order to re-map regions in the stage 2 translation table. Most of these commands correctly perform a validation on the given address range using "physmap". However, the "rkp_set_init_page_ro" command (command code 0x51) can be used to mark a region as read-only in stage 2, and performs no such validation. Here is the approximate pseudo-code for this command: __int64 rkp_set_init_page_ro(unsigned args* args_buffer) { unsigned long page_pa = rkp_get_pa(args_buffer->arg0); if ( page_pa < rkp_get_pa(text) || page_pa >= rkp_get_pa(etext) ) { if ( !rkp_s2_page_change_permission(page_pa, 128LL, 0, 0) )// RO, XN return rkp_debug_log("Cred: Unable to set permission for init cred", 0LL, 0LL, 0LL); } else { rkp_debug_log("Good init CRED is within RO range", 0LL, 0LL, 0LL); } rkp_debug_log("init cred page", 0LL, 0LL, 0LL); return rkp_set_pgt_bitmap(page_pa, 0); } The "rkp_s2_page_change_permission" function makes sure the given page is mapped in stage 2 (and if it isn't, it re-maps it). The arguments passed in by "rkp_set_init_page_ro" in this specific case mark the page as read-only and non-executable. Regardless, the physical address ranges for RKP are already present in the stage 1 translation table: ... [424] 0x0b5000000-0x0b5200000 [PXN: 1, UXN: 1, AP: 0] [425] 0x0b5200000-0x0b5400000 [PXN: 1, UXN: 1, AP: 0] [426] 0x0b5400000-0x0b5600000 [PXN: 1, UXN: 1, AP: 0] [427] 0x0b5600000-0x0b5800000 [PXN: 1, UXN: 1, AP: 0] [428] 0x0b5800000-0x0b5a00000 [PXN: 1, UXN: 1, AP: 0] ... This means an attacker can simply invoke the "rkp_set_init_page_ro" command to s2-map any wanted page, and will subsequently be able to directly read from that page, even if it resides within RKP's physical address range. I've verified this issue on an SM-G935F device, build version "XXS1APG3". The RKP version present on the device is "RKP4.2_CL7572479". Proof of concept for the RKP stage 2 remapping issue. This PoC s2-remaps RKP's physical address range and reads from it in EL1. # 0day.today [2024-11-15] #