Name |
Web Services API Signature Forgery Leveraging Hash Function Extension Weakness |
|
Likelyhood of attack |
Typical severity |
High |
High |
|
Summary |
An adversary utilizes a hash function extension/padding weakness, to modify the parameters passed to the web service requesting authentication by generating their own call in order to generate a legitimate signature hash (as described in the notes), without knowledge of the secret token sometimes provided by the web service. |
Prerequisites |
Web services check the signature of the API calls Authentication tokens / secrets are shared between the server and the legitimate client The API call signature is generated by concatenating the parameter list with the shared secret and hashing the result. An iterative hash function like MD5 and SHA1 is used. An attacker is able to intercept or in some other way gain access to the information passed between the legitimate client and the server in order to retrieve the hash value and length of the original message. The communication channel between the client and the server is not secured via channel security such as TLS |
Execution Flow |
Step |
Phase |
Description |
Techniques |
1 |
Explore |
[Find a vulnerable web service] The adversary finds a web service that uses a vulnerable authentication scheme, where an authentication token is concatenated with the parameters of a request and then hashed |
- Read application documentation to learn about authentication schemes being used
- Observe web service traffic to look for vulnerable authentication schemes
|
2 |
Experiment |
[Attempt adding padding to parameters] An adversary tests if they can simply add padding to the parameters of a request such that the request is technically changed, with the hash remaining the same |
- Exploit the hash function extension / padding weakness with only padding to test the weakness
|
3 |
Exploit |
[Add malicious parameters to request] Add malicious parameters to a captured request in addition to what is already present. Do this by exploiting the padding weakness of the hash function and send the request to the web service so that it believes it is authenticated and acts on the extra parameters. |
- Exploit the hash function extension / padding weakness by adding malicious parameters to a web service request such that it is still deemed authentic
|
|
Solutions | Design: Use a secure message authentication code (MAC) function such as an HMAC-SHA1 |
Related Weaknesses |
CWE ID
|
Description
|
CWE-290 |
Authentication Bypass by Spoofing |
CWE-328 |
Use of Weak Hash |
|
Related CAPECS |
CAPEC ID
|
Description
|
CAPEC-115 |
An attacker gains access to application, service, or device with the privileges of an authorized or privileged user by evading or circumventing an authentication mechanism. The attacker is therefore able to access protected data without authentication ever having taken place. |
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