exploit the possibilities
Home Files News &[SERVICES_TAB]About Contact Add New

Oracle Gridengine sgepasswd Buffer Overflow

Oracle Gridengine sgepasswd Buffer Overflow
Posted Nov 30, 2012
Authored by Edward Torkington | Site ngssoftware.com

Oracle Gridengine's sgepasswd suffers from a buffer overflow vulnerability.

tags | exploit, overflow
SHA-256 | 27c545a1cda033f55904dc6058b6be0f7c4252cea190bf6782a8be65bf19b66d

Oracle Gridengine sgepasswd Buffer Overflow

Change Mirror Download
=======
Summary
=======
Name: Oracle Gridengine sgepasswd Buffer Overflow
Release Date: 30 November 2012
Reference: NGS00107
Discoverer: Edward Torkington <edward.torkington@ngssecure.com>
Vendor: Oracle
Vendor Reference:
Systems Affected: Multiple packages - version 6_2u7
Risk: High
Status: Published

========
TimeLine
========
Discovered: 1 August 2011
Released: 1 August 2011
Approved: 1 August 2011
Reported: 3 August 2011
Fixed: 17 April 2012
Published: 30 November 2012

===========
Description
===========
http://www.oracle.com/us/products/tools/oracle-grid-engine-075549.html

"Oracle Grid Engine software is a distributed resource management (DRM) system that manages the distribution of users' workloads to available compute resources. While compute resources in a typical datacenter have utilization rates that are on average 10%-25%, Oracle Grid Engine can help
a company increase utilization to 80%, 90% or even 95%. This significant improvement comes from the intelligent distribution of workload to the most appropriate available resources.

When users submit their work to Oracle Grid Engine as jobs, the software monitors the current state of all resources in the cluster and is able to assign these jobs to the best-suited resources. Oracle Grid Engine gives administrators both the flexibility to accurately model their computing
environments as resources and to translate business rules into policies that govern the use of those resources."

=================
Technical Details
=================
After installation an sgepasswd binary used as part of Oracle Gridengine is marked as a SUID binary:

[dave@localhost lx24-x86]$ ls -al sgepasswd
-r-s--x--x 1 root root 1109010 Dec 20 2010 sgepasswd

This binary appears to be vulnerable to a number of buffer overflows. The easiest to exploit is in the delete a password for a named account (-d) function. Other exploits can corrupt the sgepasswd file which appears to be written in another directory. If it is corrupt sgepasswd will not run
anymore. A sample exploit is shown below:

[dave@localhost lx24-x86]$ ./sgepasswd -d `perl -e 'print "\x90"x127 . "<exploit bytes obfuscated>"'`
sh-2.05b# id
uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=500(dave)

This would a allow a local low-privileged attacker to escalate their privileges.

===============
Fix Information
===============
This has been addresses as part of oracle April update:
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/topics/security/cpuapr2012-366314.html


NCC Group Research
http://www.nccgroup.com/research


For more information please visit <a href="http://www.mimecast.com">http://www.mimecast.com<br>
This email message has been delivered safely and archived online by Mimecast.
</a>
Login or Register to add favorites

File Archive:

November 2024

  • Su
  • Mo
  • Tu
  • We
  • Th
  • Fr
  • Sa
  • 1
    Nov 1st
    30 Files
  • 2
    Nov 2nd
    0 Files
  • 3
    Nov 3rd
    0 Files
  • 4
    Nov 4th
    12 Files
  • 5
    Nov 5th
    44 Files
  • 6
    Nov 6th
    18 Files
  • 7
    Nov 7th
    9 Files
  • 8
    Nov 8th
    8 Files
  • 9
    Nov 9th
    3 Files
  • 10
    Nov 10th
    0 Files
  • 11
    Nov 11th
    14 Files
  • 12
    Nov 12th
    20 Files
  • 13
    Nov 13th
    63 Files
  • 14
    Nov 14th
    18 Files
  • 15
    Nov 15th
    8 Files
  • 16
    Nov 16th
    0 Files
  • 17
    Nov 17th
    0 Files
  • 18
    Nov 18th
    18 Files
  • 19
    Nov 19th
    7 Files
  • 20
    Nov 20th
    13 Files
  • 21
    Nov 21st
    6 Files
  • 22
    Nov 22nd
    48 Files
  • 23
    Nov 23rd
    0 Files
  • 24
    Nov 24th
    0 Files
  • 25
    Nov 25th
    60 Files
  • 26
    Nov 26th
    0 Files
  • 27
    Nov 27th
    44 Files
  • 28
    Nov 28th
    0 Files
  • 29
    Nov 29th
    0 Files
  • 30
    Nov 30th
    0 Files

Top Authors In Last 30 Days

File Tags

Systems

packet storm

© 2024 Packet Storm. All rights reserved.

Services
Security Services
Hosting By
Rokasec
close