Eric Blake
2021-Aug-10 18:08 UTC
[Libguestfs] [PATCH] docs: Link to protocol security considerations in uri docs
Especially useful in light of the recent publishing of https://nostarttls.secvuln.info/, which documents a variety of implementations vulnerable to downgrade attacks in SMTP and IMAP, as well as its caution that that any protocol with a STARTTLS operation (which includes NBD) needs to be aware of the potential downgrade attacks. The NBD protocol documentation already covers what is necessary to avoid the effects of a downgrade attack, and all known implementations of NBD servers and clients with working NBD_OPT_STARTTLS have at least one mode where TLS is mandatory rather than opportunistic. So I don't see this as a CVE against the NBD protocol itself, so much as a worry about the potential for future poor implementations that disregard the documentation. --- I'm likely to push this to the NBD spec later this week if it doesn't receive any reviews beforehand. doc/uri.md | 6 ++++++ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+) diff --git a/doc/uri.md b/doc/uri.md index 925ad4b..28aa94d 100644 --- a/doc/uri.md +++ b/doc/uri.md @@ -73,6 +73,12 @@ One of the following scheme names SHOULD be used to indicate an NBD URI: Other URI scheme names MAY be used but not all NBD clients will understand them or even recognize that they refer to NBD. +Note that using opportunistically encrypted connections (via the `nbd` +or `nbd+unix` scheme) risks a protocol downgrade attack; whereas +requests for a secure connection (via the `nbds` or `nbds+unix` +scheme) MUST use TLS to connect. For more details, see +<https://github.com/NetworkBlockDevice/nbd/blob/master/doc/proto.md#security-considerations> + ## NBD URI authority The authority field SHOULD be used for TCP/IP connections and SHOULD -- 2.31.1
Eric Blake
2021-Aug-12 14:39 UTC
[Libguestfs] [PATCH] docs: Link to protocol security considerations in uri docs
On Tue, Aug 10, 2021 at 01:08:59PM -0500, Eric Blake wrote:> Especially useful in light of the recent publishing of > https://nostarttls.secvuln.info/, which documents a variety of > implementations vulnerable to downgrade attacks in SMTP and IMAP, as > well as its caution that that any protocol with a STARTTLS operation > (which includes NBD) needs to be aware of the potential downgrade > attacks. > > The NBD protocol documentation already covers what is necessary to > avoid the effects of a downgrade attack, and all known implementations > of NBD servers and clients with working NBD_OPT_STARTTLS have at least > one mode where TLS is mandatory rather than opportunistic. So I don't > see this as a CVE against the NBD protocol itself, so much as a worry > about the potential for future poor implementations that disregard the > documentation. > --- > > I'm likely to push this to the NBD spec later this week if it doesn't > receive any reviews beforehand.As a followup, I got this reply from Hanno B?ck on oss-security: https://www.openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2021/08/11/8 | The buffering vulnerabilities we found are in STARTTLS implementations | that have the expectation to enforce a secure connection, but suffer | from various vulnerabilities in the implementation. One of the reasons that SMTP and IMAP were particularly problematic in implementations is that they are line-based protocols, with arbitrary-sized packets where the length isn't known until the \n is reached. Both clients and servers have to choose whether to read one character at a time (painfully slow) or read ahead into a buffer and then processing what is in the buffer. Many of the CVEs raised were in regards to mishandling such buffers, such as acting on previously-buffered plaintext even after the switch to encryption. Thankfully, the NBD protocol has a much more structured handshake (while different NBD_OPT commands can have different payload lenghts, at least the header of each packet designates the length in advance, reducing the need for read-ahead buffering), as well as documentation that the NBD_OPT_ phase is a lockstep algorithm (neither client nor server should be building up a buffer of more than one command/response). Another aspect of the SMTP/IMAP security holes came from incorrectly carrying state across the transition to encryption (making a false assumption that the answer made in plaintext will be the same when encrypted). Unfortunately, I have realized that the NBD spec has one bit of state (NBD_OPT_SET_META_CONTEXT) where it is currently silent on how to handle that state across a transition to encrypted. So I plan on posting a followup patch that matches the actual implementation of nbdkit in opportunistic mode (qemu-nbd does not offer opportunistic mode, and nbd-server does not suport NBD_OPT_SET_META_CONTEXT): a server in opportunistic mode MUST treat the NBD_OPT_STARTTLS command as wiping out any earlier NBD_OPT_SET_META_CONTEXT. -- Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer Red Hat, Inc. +1-919-301-3266 Virtualization: qemu.org | libvirt.org