-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 @stake Inc. www.atstake.com Security Advisory Advisory Name: Asterisk SIP Implementation Issue Release Date: 09/04/2003 Application: Asterisk Platform: Linux (x86) Severity: An attacker is able to obtain remote access to the host in question prior to authentication Authors: Ollie Whitehouse [ollie@atstake.com] Graham Murphy [gmurphy@atstake.com] Stephen Kapp [skapp@atstake.com] Vendor Status: Informed / CVS Updated 15th of August 2003 CVE Candidate: CAN-2003-???? (Pending) Reference: www.atstake.com/research/advisories/2003/a090403-1.txt Overview: Asterisk (http://www.asterisk.org/) is a complete PBX (Private Branch eXchange) in software. It runs on Linux and provides all of the features you would expect from a PBX and more. Asterisk does voice over IP in three protocols (SIP, IAX (v1 and v2)) and H323, and can interoperate with almost all standards-based telephony equipment using relatively inexpensive hardware. The Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) is an application-layer control (signaling) protocol for creating, modifying and terminating sessions with one or more participants. These sessions include Internet multimedia conferences, Internet telephone calls, multimedia distribution and instant messaging. The SIP protocol is described in RFC3261 (with extensions contained in RFC3265). While conducting a source code review of the SIP protocol implementation within Asterisk, @stake found a vulnerability that could allow an attacker to obtain remote and unauthenticated access to the host in question. This is a good example of a vulnerability that would be difficult to identify in the process of automated fault injection (fuzzing). Details: @stake discovered that if a specially crafted SIP request of a specific size was sent (body length of 1024 bytes) with a particular request type (MESSAGE and INFO) that the following function could be exploited: -------[chan_sip.c fragment start]------ static int get_msg_text(char *buf, int len, struct sip_request *req) { int x; strcpy(buf, ""); for (x=0;xlines;x++) { strncat(buf, req->line[x], len - strlen(buf) - 5); strcat(buf, "\n"); } return 0; } -------[chan_sip.c fragment end]------ Therefore, when a specially crafted request with a body size of 1024 bytes is received, the end of the internal buffer used will be over-written. This happens because a negative number is passed to strncat() instead of the following (example): 0x080483b9 : push $0xa - Copy 10 bytes 0x080483bb : pushl 0x8(%ebp) The number is decremented past 0x0 and wraps to 0xFFFFFFFF to become (example): 0x080483e5 : push $0xfffffffc - Copy a lot more than 10 0x080483e7 : pushl 0x8(%ebp) So this causes the strncat() to copy this many bytes, however due to a null being located in our page of memory, we don't get a page fault. Instead it simply overwrites the save return address. Thus this becomes an easily exploitable buffer overflow. Although SIP supports authentication, both the MESSAGE and INFO messages will be processed without any authentication. This allows any user who can send SIP messages to Asterisk to take advantage of the vulnerability. By exploiting this vulnerability, @stake managed to obtain access to the remote host in question. The access level attained by exploiting this vulnerability is that of the user that started the Asterisk services, which in the default installation is as the root user. Recommendation: @stake notified the author of this particular code on the 15th of August. The author developed and deployed a patch silently to the CVS on the 15th of August. @stake would recommend that if you have not deployed a CVS version since the 15th of August 2003 to immediately do so. Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) Information: The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) project has assigned the following names to these issues. These are candidates for inclusion in the CVE list (http://cve.mitre.org), which standardizes names for security problems. CAN-2003-??? Asterisk SIP implementation issue @stake Vulnerability Reporting Policy: http://www.atstake.com/research/policy/ @stake Advisory Archive: http://www.atstake.com/research/advisories/ PGP Key: http://www.atstake.com/research/pgp_key.asc @stake is currently seeking application security experts to fill several consulting positions. Applicants should have strong application development skills and be able to perform application security design reviews, code reviews, and application penetration testing. Please send resumes to jobs@atstake.com. Copyright 2003 @stake, Inc. All rights reserved. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP 8.0 iQA/AwUBP1ewYke9kNIfAm4yEQIcuQCggaZa0YYaGBScExKcHI3oJHV4bX4AnjUl kLia5aqg6D44i54pQ9B+aY5S =wtSA -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----