Headline
CVE-2017-12114: TALOS-2017-0466 || Cisco Talos Intelligence Group
An exploitable improper authorization vulnerability exists in admin_peers API of cpp-ethereum’s JSON-RPC (commit 4e1015743b95821849d001618a7ce82c7c073768). A JSON request can cause an access to the restricted functionality resulting in authorization bypass. An attacker can send JSON to trigger this vulnerability.
Summary
An exploitable improper authorization vulnerability exists in admin_peers API of cpp-ethereum’s JSON-RPC (commit 4e1015743b95821849d001618a7ce82c7c073768). A JSON request can cause an access to the restricted functionality resulting in authorization bypass.
An attacker can send JSON to trigger this vulnerability.
Tested Versions
Ethereum commit 4e1015743b95821849d001618a7ce82c7c073768
Product URLs
http://cpp-ethereum.org
CVSSv3 Score
4.0 - CVSS:3.0/AV:N/AC:H/PR:N/UI:N/S:C/C:L/I:N/A:N
CWE
CWE-285: Improper Authorization
Details
CPP-Ethereum is a C++ ethereum client, one of the 3 most popular clients for the ethereum platform. One of the components that is part of cpp-ethereum is a JSON-RPC server which exposes various APIs to manage client/node functionality. Improper authorization checks in the implementation of the `admin_peers` API allows a remote attacker without any credentials to triggers functionality reserved only for a user with administrator privileges. We can observe a similar approach in two other clients (lack of any kind of authorization) but in this case the situation is exacerbated by the fact that:
- By default interface is bound to 0.0.0.0, which means it’s exposed to the world
- The Content-Type set to ‘application/json’ during requests is not enforced, which means that even if eth JSON-RPC daemon is ran on machine behind a NAT
the JSON-RPC APIs can still be easily triggered by CSRF or SSRF attacks.
- older version of the same API had implemented an authorization check
- there is no visible option to change the default JSON-RPC interface to localhost
For comparison let us take geth (the go ethereum client) which also implements a JSON-RPC interface but using much better security practices: - by default the interface is bound to localhost - The “Content-Type” request header value must be set to ‘application/json’ - CORS settings are set to block by default all “cross-domain” requests
Let us take a look at admin_peers and describe in details improper/consistency check of authorization.
Line 73 Json::Value AdminNet::admin_peers()
Line 74 {
Line 75 Json::Value ret;
Line 76 for (p2p::PeerSessionInfo const& peer: m_network.peers())
Line 77 ret.append(toJson(peer));
Line 78 return ret;
Line 79 }
As we can see there is no check for calling user privileges which is done in couple other APIs via RPC_ADMIN macro. Same functionality is exposed over admin_net_peers API where at the beginning of API body, privileges check is made:
Line 35 Json::Value AdminNet::admin_net_peers(std::string const& _session)
Line 36 {
Line 37 RPC_ADMIN;
Line 38 return admin_peers();
Line 39 }
We are aware that this client is not recommended for mining and that the mentioned functionality related with the administrator interface is turned off by default. However when enabled the default behavior is insecure and can allow a remote attacker to perform unauthenticated RPC requests.
Crash Information
icewall@ubuntu:~/bugs/cpp-ethereum/build/eth$ ./eth -j --ipc --private 123 --no-discovery --datadir `pwd`/data --config config.json --admin-via-http
cpp-ethereum, a C++ Ethereum client
cpp-ethereum 1.3.0
By cpp-ethereum contributors, (c) 2013-2016.
See the README for contributors and credits.
Networking disabled. To start, use netstart or pass --bootstrap or a remote host.
JSONRPC Admin Session Key: Zt9zxSANHZs=
ℹ 03:09:10 AM.197|miner0 Loading full DAG of seedhash: #00000000…
ℹ 03:09:10 AM.978|miner0 Full DAG loaded
icewall@ubuntu:~/bugs/cpp-ethereum$ curl -X POST --data '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"admin_peers","params":[],"id":1}' localhost:8545
{"id":1,"jsonrpc":"2.0","result":null}
Timeline
2017-12-06 - Vendor Disclosure
2017-01-09 - Public Release
Discovered by Marcin ‘Icewall’ Noga of Cisco Talos.