OpenSSH Security Advisory: x11fwd.adv
This document may be found at: http://www.openssh.com/txt/x11fwd.adv
1. Affected configurations
All versions of OpenSSH prior to 7.2p2 with X11Forwarding
enabled.
2. Vulnerability
Missing sanitisation of untrusted input allows an
authenticated user who is able to request X11 forwarding
to inject commands to xauth(1).
Injection of xauth commands grants the ability to read
arbitrary files under the authenticated user's privilege,
Other xauth commands allow limited information leakage,
file overwrite, port probing and generally expose xauth(1),
which was not written with a hostile user in mind, as an
attack surface.
xauth(1) is run under the user's privilege, so this
vulnerability offers no additional access to unrestricted
accounts, but could circumvent key or account restrictions
such as sshd_config ForceCommand, authorized_keys
command="..." or restricted shells.
3. Mitigation
Set X11Forwarding=no in sshd_config. This is the default.
For authorized_keys that specify a "command" restriction,
also set the "restrict" (available in OpenSSH >=7.2) or
"no-x11-forwarding" restrictions.
4. Details
As part of establishing an X11 forwarding session, sshd(8)
accepts an X11 authentication credential from the client.
This credential is supplied to the xauth(1) utility to
establish it for X11 applications that the user subsequently
runs.
The contents of the credential's components (authentication
scheme and credential data) were not sanitised to exclude
meta-characters such as newlines. An attacker could
therefore supply a credential that injected commands to
xauth(1). The attacker could then use a number of xauth
commands to read or overwrite arbitrary files subject to
file permissions, connect to local ports or perform attacks
on xauth(1) itself.
OpenSSH 7.2p2 implements a whitelist of characters that
are permitted to appear in X11 authentication credentials.
5. Credit
This issue was identified by github.com/tintinweb and
communicated to the OpenSSH developers on March 3rd, 2016.
6. Fix
Portable OpenSSH 7.2p2 contains a fix for this vulnerability.
Patches for supported OpenBSD releases (5.7, 5.8 and 5.9) have
been committed to the -STABLE branches and are available on the
errata pages:
http://www.openbsd.org/errata57.html
http://www.openbsd.org/errata58.html
http://www.openbsd.org/errata59.html
Nico Kadel-Garcia
2016-Mar-10 12:54 UTC
OpenSSH Security Advisory: xauth command injection
On Thu, Mar 10, 2016 at 7:10 AM, Damien Miller <djm at openbsd.org> wrote:> OpenSSH Security Advisory: x11fwd.adv > > This document may be found at: http://www.openssh.com/txt/x11fwd.adv > > 1. Affected configurations > > All versions of OpenSSH prior to 7.2p2 with X11Forwarding > enabled. > > 2. Vulnerability > > Missing sanitisation of untrusted input allows an > authenticated user who is able to request X11 forwarding > to inject commands to xauth(1).Ouch. I'm just trying to figure out under what normal circumstances a connection with X11 forwarding enabled wouldn't be owned by a user who already has normal system privileges for ssh, sftp, and scp access. I suppose it might be an unexpected filesystem access if someone's public SSH keys are tied to a "ForceCommand" option to run some X based application in $HOME/.ssh/authorized_keys, and that is actually relied on to limit access on the SSH server. And, of course, there is an XKCD cartoon about sanitizing inputs. https://xkcd.com/327/
Dag-Erling Smørgrav
2016-Mar-11 09:41 UTC
OpenSSH Security Advisory: xauth command injection
Nico Kadel-Garcia <nkadel at gmail.com> writes:> I'm just trying to figure out under what normal circumstances a > connection with X11 forwarding enabled wouldn't be owned by a user who > already has normal system privileges for ssh, sftp, and scp access.Some OS distributions (FreeBSD, RHEL / CentOS, probably Fedora) have X11Forwarding enabled by default. DES -- Dag-Erling Sm?rgrav - des at des.no