------------------------------------------------------------------------ Glype proxy cookie jar path traversal allows code execution ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Securify, September 2014 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Abstract ------------------------------------------------------------------------ A path traversal vulnerability has been identified in the Glype web-based proxy that allows an attacker to run arbitrary PHP code on the server or to remove critical files from the filesystem. This only affects servers that are configured to: - store Glype cookies locally; AND - disable PHP display_errors; AND - allow the webserver process to write to the filesystem (document root). ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Affected versions ------------------------------------------------------------------------ This issue has been identified in Glype 1.4.9. Older version are most likely affected as well. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Fix ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Glype was informed and a fixed version (1.4.10) is now available at www.glype.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Details ------------------------------------------------------------------------ http://www.securify.nl/advisory/SFY20140901/glype_proxy_cookie_jar_path_traversal_allows_code_execution.html File creation via path traversal When the "Store cookies on server" option is set in admin.php, Glype will create a cookie jar on the server to store a user's cookies. The filename for the cookie jar is created using the user's session ID. browse.php $toSet[CURLOPT_COOKIEFILE] = $toSet[CURLOPT_COOKIEJAR] = $CONFIG['cookies_folder'] . session_id(); PHP takes this session ID from a cookie, so the value returned by session_id() is under control of the user. By using path traversal a user can overwrite or create any file on the server with the rights of the webserver's system user. Code execution As a POC the following steps were taken to create and run a malicious PHP file in the webroot: 1. Glype was installed with the "Store cookies on server" option set in admin.php. The cookie directory remained default (tmp/cookies/). 2. A request was initiated with the Glype session cookie's value set to "../../test.php". 3. The Glype proxy was used to surf to a Securify controlled domain that returned a header that set a cookie containing a malicious PHP script. Set-Cookie: TestCookie=; expires=Thu, 31-Aug-2014 19:14:10 GMT This caused Glype to write this PHP backdoor to test.php in the webroot. When requested using a browser, PHP parses the cookie jar file containing the malicious PHP code. The following Python code can be used as a simple test to verify if your Glype installation is affected: import urllib2 server = 'http://' url = '/browse.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.glype.com&b=28' req = urllib2.Request(server + url) req.add_header('Referer', server) req.add_header('Cookie', 's=../securify') r = urllib2.urlopen(req) You are affected if a file named "securify" is created outside of the cookie directory. Arbitrary file removal The following code is affected by a (similar) path traversal vulnerability allowing an attacker to remove any file the HTTP process has access to: includes/process.php # Look for cookie file and check writable if ( is_writable($file = $CONFIG['cookies_folder'] . session_id()) ) { # Delete it unlink($file); } This can for example be exploited to put a Glype server out of service or to clear log files.