microsoft windows 10.0.17134.648 http > smb ntlm reflection leads to privilege elevation
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VULNERABILITY DETAILS It's possible to use the NTLM reflection attack to escape a browser sandbox in the case where the sandboxed process is allowed to create TCP sockets. In particular, I was able to combine the issues mentioned below with a bug in Chromium to escape its sandbox. ## HTTP -> SMB NTLM reflection This is a long known attack that was described, for example, in https://bugs.chromium.org/p/project-zero/issues/detail?id=222. As far as I can tell, MS16-075 was supposed to to fix it by blocking attempts to reflect NTLM authentication operating in the same machine mode (not sure about the actual internal term for that). However, it's still possible to reflect NTLM authentication that works in the regular remote mode, and an attacker can force the parties to use the remote mode, for example, by clearing the NTLMSSP_NEGOTIATE_OEM_DOMAIN_SUPPLIED flag in the initial NEGOTIATE_MESSAGE message. In the actual exploit, a compromised sandboxed process acts as both a web server and an SMB client, and asks the browser to visit http://localhost:[fake_webserver_port]. The browser receives an NTLM authentication request and considers the `localhost` domain to be safe to automatically log on with the current user's credentials. The sandboxed process forwards the corresponding packets to the local SMB server. The problem here is that since the established session is considered remotely authenticated, it's not allowed to access administrative shares unless the browser process runs at the high integrity level. Therefore, another bug is required to gain file system access. ## Insufficient path check in EFSRPC The Encrypting File System Remote Protocol is a Remote Procedure Call interface that is used to manage data objects stored in an encrypted form. It supports backing up and restoring files over SMB, among other things. Functions like `EfsRpcOpenFileRaw` implement security checks, i.e., they forbid remote users to pass regular file paths. However, if the attacker passes a UNC path of the form `\\localhost\C$\...`, `lsass.exe` will initiate a new SMB connection while impersonating the calling user, but this time using the same machine mode authentication; therefore it will be permitted to access the C$ share. The exploit saves the payload on the user's disk (the easiest way might be just to force it to be auto-downloaded as a .txt file) and calls the EFSRPC methods to copy it as an .exe file to the user's Startup folder. There's also another path check bypass that has been found by James Forshaw. `EfsRpcOpenFileRaw` accepts file paths starting with `\\.\C:\...`, presumably thinking that it's a UNC path since it starts with two back-slashes. Please note that this variant also works in the case where a regular user's credentials are relayed to another machine in a domain, so it might have wider security implications. It's also worth mentioning that the `efsrpc` named pipe might not be enabled by default, but the same RPC endpoint is available on the `lsass` named pipe with UUID [c681d488-d850-11d0-8c52-00c04fd90f7e]. REPRODUCTION CASE The proof-of-concept is based on [impacket](https://github.com/SecureAuthCorp/impacket/). It's a collection of Python classes that supports working with SMB and MSRPC. 1. Run `start.cmd`, which downloads impacket from Github, applies the patch, and starts the server. 2. Open http://localhost/ in a Chromium-based browser. 3. You should see a new .exe file appearing on your desktop. VERSION Microsoft Windows [Version 10.0.17134.648] REFERENCES https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms-nlmp/b38c36ed-2804-4868-a9ff-8dd3182128e4 https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms-efsr/08796ba8-01c8-4872-9221-1000ec2eff31 Proof of Concept: https://github.com/offensive-security/exploitdb-bin-sploits/raw/master/bin-sploits/47115.zip
Microsoft windows 10.0.17134.648 http > smb ntlm reflection leads to privilege elevation Vulnerability / Exploit Source : Microsoft windows 10.0.17134.648 http > smb ntlm reflection leads to privilege elevation