SugarCRM 5.2.0e Remote Code Execution Name Remote Code Execution in SugarCRM Systems Affected Sugar CRM 5.2.0e and possibly earlier versions Severity High Impact (CVSSv2) High 8/10, vector: (AV:N/AC:L/Au:S/C:P/I:C/A:P) Vendor http://www.sugarcrm.com Advisory http://www.ush.it/team/ush/hack-sugarcrm_520e/adv.txt Authors Antonio "s4tan" Parata (s4tan AT ush DOT it) Francesco "ascii" Ongaro (ascii AT ush DOT it) Giovanni "evilaliv3" Pellerano (evilaliv3 AT ush DOT it) Date 20090613 I. BACKGROUND >From the SugarCRM web site: "Sugar Express is designed for individuals and small companies. Core CRM features help employees get on the same page while more complex functionality is stripped away. Sugar Express is ideal for providing a single view of the customer from the initial marketing campaign through the sales cycle and on to customer support. With Sugar Express, companies have a single system of truth for managing customer interactions.". II. DESCRIPTION A Remote Code Execution Vulnerability exists in SugarCRM software. III. ANALYSIS Summary: A Remote Code Execution issue has been found in SugarCRM version 5.2.0e. In order to exploit this vulnerability an account on the system is required. The vulnerability resides in the "Compose Email" section. The software permits sending email with attachments (if not disabled by the administrator). When the name of the file is specified, a validation routine is called: --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- function safeAttachmentName($filename) { global $sugar_config; $badExtension = false; //get position of last "." in file name $file_ext_beg = strrpos($filename, "."); $file_ext = ""; //get file extension if($file_ext_beg > 0) { $file_ext = substr($filename, $file_ext_beg + 1); } //check to see if this is a file with extension located in "badext" foreach($sugar_config['upload_badext'] as $badExt) { if(strtolower($file_ext) == strtolower($badExt)) { //if found, then append with .txt and break out of lookup $filename = $filename . ".txt"; $badExtension = true; break; // no need to look for more } // if } // foreach return $badExtension; } --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- This routine checks if the extension of the filename is blacklisted, if so the ".txt" extension is appended to the filename. However there is a coding error: the function assumes that the filename (extension excluded) is at least one char long, this assumption is derived from the statement: --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- if($file_ext_beg > 0) --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- Of course this is a bad assumption, if we set the whole filename to ".php" than the check is skipped and a void extension is assumed. Because void extensions are not in the blacklist, no futher extension is added to the filename. After this check a file is created on the filesystem in the form "". Where "id" is an alphanumeric string. With the trick illustrated we are able to create a file with ".php" extension. To do this upload a new file attachment and set the filename to ".php". After this the attacker has to find the name of the file that was uploaded in the attachment list files. To obtaint the real filename look in the HTML response for a string like: --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- The real filename in this case is "6e25aba0-9dc4-2a57-8bae-4a1317b35d47. php". Now the attacker has to find the directory where the file resides. Again searching the HTML page for the attribute "assigned_user_id" reveals the needed information: --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- At this point the attacker has all the informations to invoke the uploaded file. Filename: 6e25aba0-9dc4-2a57-8bae-4a1317b35d47.php Assigned user id: abf7c77b-2f71-8071-63ba-4a131068e9a2 To directly request it issue a request to: --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- http://www.example.com/cache/modules/Emails/abf7c77b-2f71-8071-63ba-4a13 1068e9a2/6e25aba0-9dc4-2a57-8bae-4a1317b35d47.php --8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<--8<-- As final note: if the user is "administrator", "assigned_user_id" is always "1". IV. DETECTION SugarCRM 5.2.0e and possibly earlier versions are vulnerable. V. WORKAROUND Upgrade to latest version 5.2.0f VI. VENDOR RESPONSE "We have fixed the issue and will be shipping the patch on June 12th. We will be doing a full pass of quality assurance in this area to ensure that no other issues crop up around file uploads. The fix involves modifying the code that handles uploads for email attachments to save the files using just a GUID rather than the original file name. This is similar to how uploads are handled else where in the application and should prevent the code from being executable on the server side." VII. CVE INFORMATION No CVE at this time. VIII. DISCLOSURE TIMELINE 20090519 Bug discovered 20090528 First vendor contact 20090528 Vendor Response 20090530 Vendor Confirm the vulnerability 20090602 Vendor propose a possible fix and path release 20090612 Vendor released SugarCRM 5.2.0f (Vulnerability fixed) 20090613 Advisory released IX. CREDIT Antonio "s4tan" Parata, Francesco "ascii" Ongaro and Giovanni "evilaliv3" Pellerano are credited with the discovery of this vulnerability. Antonio "s4tan" Parata web site: http://www.ush.it/ mail: s4tan AT ush DOT it Francesco "ascii" Ongaro web site: http://www.ush.it/ mail: ascii AT ush DOT it Giovanni "evilaliv3" Pellerano web site: http://www.ush.it/, http://www.evilaliv3.org/ mail: evilaliv3 AT ush DOT it X. LEGAL NOTICES Copyright (c) 2009 Francesco "ascii" Ongaro Permission is granted for the redistribution of this alert electronically. It may not be edited in any way without mine express written consent. If you wish to reprint the whole or any part of this alert in any other medium other than electronically, please email me for permission. Disclaimer: The information in the advisory is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing based on currently available information. Use of the information constitutes acceptance for use in an AS IS condition. There are no warranties with regard to this information. Neither the author nor the publisher accepts any liability for any direct, indirect, or consequential loss or damage arising from use of, or reliance on, this information.