Name |
Buffer Overflow via Symbolic Links |
|
Likelyhood of attack |
Typical severity |
High |
High |
|
Summary |
This type of attack leverages the use of symbolic links to cause buffer overflows. An adversary can try to create or manipulate a symbolic link file such that its contents result in out of bounds data. When the target software processes the symbolic link file, it could potentially overflow internal buffers with insufficient bounds checking. |
Prerequisites |
The adversary can create symbolic link on the target host. The target host does not perform correct boundary checking while consuming data from a resources. |
Execution Flow |
Step |
Phase |
Description |
Techniques |
1 |
Explore |
[Identify target application] The adversary identifies a target application or program that might load in certain files to memory. |
|
2 |
Experiment |
[Find injection vector] The adversary identifies an injection vector to deliver the excessive content to the targeted application's buffer. |
- The adversary creates or modifies a symbolic link pointing to those files which contain an excessive amount of data. If creating a symbolic link to one of those files causes different behavior in the application, then an injection vector has been identified.
|
3 |
Experiment |
[Craft overflow file content] The adversary crafts the content to be injected. If the intent is to simply cause the software to crash, the content need only consist of an excessive quantity of random data. If the intent is to leverage the overflow for execution of arbitrary code, the adversary crafts the payload in such a way that the overwritten return address is replaced with one of the adversary's choosing. |
- Create malicious shellcode that will execute when the program execution is returned to it.
- Use a NOP-sled in the overflow content to more easily "slide" into the malicious code. This is done so that the exact return address need not be correct, only in the range of all of the NOPs
|
4 |
Exploit |
[Overflow the buffer] Using the specially crafted file content, the adversary creates a symbolic link from the identified resource to the malicious file, causing a targeted buffer overflow attack. |
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Solutions | Pay attention to the fact that the resource you read from can be a replaced by a Symbolic link. You can do a Symlink check before reading the file and decide that this is not a legitimate way of accessing the resource. Because Symlink can be modified by an adversary, make sure that the ones you read are located in protected directories. Pay attention to the resource pointed to by your symlink links (See attack pattern named "Forced Symlink race"), they can be replaced by malicious resources. Always check the size of the input data before copying to a buffer. Use a language or compiler that performs automatic bounds checking. Use an abstraction library to abstract away risky APIs. Not a complete solution. Compiler-based canary mechanisms such as StackGuard, ProPolice and the Microsoft Visual Studio /GS flag. Unless this provides automatic bounds checking, it is not a complete solution. Use OS-level preventative functionality. Not a complete solution. |
Related Weaknesses |
CWE ID
|
Description
|
CWE-20 |
Improper Input Validation |
CWE-74 |
Improper Neutralization of Special Elements in Output Used by a Downstream Component ('Injection') |
CWE-118 |
Incorrect Access of Indexable Resource ('Range Error') |
CWE-119 |
Improper Restriction of Operations within the Bounds of a Memory Buffer |
CWE-120 |
Buffer Copy without Checking Size of Input ('Classic Buffer Overflow') |
CWE-285 |
Improper Authorization |
CWE-302 |
Authentication Bypass by Assumed-Immutable Data |
CWE-680 |
Integer Overflow to Buffer Overflow |
CWE-697 |
Incorrect Comparison |
|
Related CAPECS |
CAPEC ID
|
Description
|
CAPEC-100 |
Buffer Overflow attacks target improper or missing bounds checking on buffer operations, typically triggered by input injected by an adversary. As a consequence, an adversary is able to write past the boundaries of allocated buffer regions in memory, causing a program crash or potentially redirection of execution as per the adversaries' choice. |
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