The vulnerable system is bound to the network stack and the set of possible attackers extends beyond the other options listed below, up to and including the entire Internet. Such a vulnerability is often termed “remotely exploitable” and can be thought of as an attack being exploitable at the protocol level one or more network hops away (e.g., across one or more routers). An example of a network attack is an attacker causing a denial of service by sending a specially crafted TCP packet across a wide area network (e.g., CVE-2004-0230).
Attack Complexity
Low
AC
The attacker must take no measurable action to exploit the vulnerability. The attack requires no target-specific circumvention to exploit the vulnerability. An attacker can expect repeatable success against the vulnerable system.
Privileges Required
None
PR
The attacker is unauthenticated prior to attack, and therefore does not require any access to settings or files of the vulnerable system to carry out an attack.
User Interaction
None
UI
The vulnerable system can be exploited without interaction from any human user, other than the attacker. Examples include: a remote attacker is able to send packets to a target system a locally authenticated attacker executes code to elevate privileges
Scope
Unchanged
S
An exploited vulnerability can only affect resources managed by the same security authority. In the case of a vulnerability in a virtualized environment, an exploited vulnerability in one guest instance would not affect neighboring guest instances.
Confidentiality
High
C
There is total information disclosure, resulting in all data on the system being revealed to the attacker, or there is a possibility of the attacker gaining control over confidential data.
Integrity
High
I
There is a total compromise of system integrity. There is a complete loss of system protection, resulting in the attacker being able to modify any file on the target system.
Availability
High
A
There is a total shutdown of the affected resource. The attacker can deny access to the system or data, potentially causing significant loss to the organization.
Micro Focus GroupWise 2014 R2 (<=SP1) Multiple vulnerabilitiesSEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory < 20160825-0 >
=======================================================================
title: Multiple vulnerabilities
product: Micro Focus GroupWise
vulnerable version: GroupWise 2014 R2 (<=SP1)
GroupWise 2014
(unsupported versions may be affected)
fixed version: GroupWise 2014 R2 Service Pack 1 Hot Patch 1
CVE number: CVE-2016-5760, CVE-2016-5761, CVE-2016-5762
impact: critical
homepage: https://www.novell.com/products/groupwise/
found: 2016-07
by: W. Ettlinger (Office Vienna)
SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab
An integrated part of SEC Consult
Bangkok - Berlin - Linz - Montreal - Moscow
Singapore - Vienna (HQ) - Vilnius - Zurich
https://www.sec-consult.com
=======================================================================
Vendor description:
-------------------
"Micro Focus GroupWise is a complete collaboration software solution that
provides email, calendaring, instant messaging, task management, contact and
document management functions. GroupWise has long been praised by customers and
industry watchers for its security and reliability."
URL: https://www.novell.com/products/groupwise/
Business recommendation:
------------------------
During a quick security check SEC Consult found three vulnerabilities in the
Micro Focus GroupWise server applications.
As these partly critical vulnerabilities were identified during a short time
frame SEC Consult recommends to conduct a thorough technical security audit.
Vulnerability overview/description:
-----------------------------------
1) Reflected cross site scripting in the administrator console (CVE-2016-5760)
Two reflected cross site scripting vulnerabilities have been identified in the
gwadmin-console application. An attacker could potentially take over an
administrator's session.
2) Persistent cross site scripting via emails (CVE-2016-5761)
By sending a single email to a victim an attacker could take over the victim's
email account. For a successful exploitation the victim has to click on a
link in an email opened in GroupWise WebAccess.
3) Heap-based Buffer Overflow / Integer Overflow (CVE-2016-5762)
By sending a crafted value for the username or the password to GroupWise
WebAccess or the GroupWise Post Office Agent during login an attacker can
overwrite heap memory. In order to exploit this vulnerability no user
authentication is required.
PLEASE NOTE: A successful exploitation of this vulnerability may allow an
attacker to execute code remotely. As SEC Consult only conducted a very quick
security check this has not been verified.
Proof of concept:
-----------------
1) Reflected cross site scripting in the administrator console
The following links demonstrate reflected cross site scripting vulnerabilities:
https://testhost:9710/gwadmin-console/install/login.jsp?token=asdf%22%2b
alert%28%27xss%27%29%2b%22
https://testhost:9710/gwadmin-console/index.jsp#poa:%3Cimg%20src=x%20one
rror=alert%28%27xss%27%29%3E
2) Persistent cross site scripting via emails
The following Python fragment demonstrates the generation of a hyperlink that,
when embeded into an HTML email, would, upon clicking it, open a new mail dialog.
---- snip ----
msg = """
<a
href="javascript:top.opener.document.getElementById(String.fromCharCode(
$charcode)).firstChild.firstChild.click()"
target = _self>click me</a>
""".replace('$charcode', ','.join(str(ord(x)) for x in list('idNewPopupMenu')))
---- snip ----
3) Heap-based Buffer Overflow / Integer Overflow
When a username or password longer than 65332 (2^16 - 3) is specified, an
overflow causes the Post Office Agent to allocate too little memory.
The following pseudocode shows how the memory to be allocated is calculated
based on the input length.
((uint16_t) ((<length>) + 3) & 0xFFFC) + 1)
Therefore, a value of 65533 would cause the application to allocate 1 byte. By
modifying this value accordingly, an attacker can cause the application to
allocate an arbitrary amount of memory.
The user-specified value is then copied into this buffer until a NUL-byte is
reached. This allows an attacker to write non-NUL bytes after the allocated
heap chunk.
Vulnerable / tested versions:
-----------------------------
The version 2014 R2 SP1 of Micro Focus GroupWise was found to be
vulnerable. This version was the latest version at the time of the discovery.
Vendor contact timeline:
------------------------
2016-07-05: Contacting vendor through security (at) novell (dot) com [email concealed]
2016-07-06: Micro Focus was able to reproduce the vulnerabilities
2016-07-25: Micro Focus: The issues have been resolved in development
2016-08-12: Micro Focus: Hotpatch is currently undergoing QA
2016-08-25: Coordinated release of security advisory
Solution:
---------
The "GroupWise 2014 R2 Service Pack 1 Hot Patch 1" should be applied
immediately. This update can be found at:
http://download.novell.com/Download?buildid=RrXPw5FEDLg~ (Linux)
http://download.novell.com/Download?buildid=aSiFyZ1z1SY~ (Windows)
Knowledge base references at Micro Focus:
https://www.novell.com/support/kb/doc.php?id=7017973 (#1)
https://www.novell.com/support/kb/doc.php?id=7017974 (#2)
https://www.novell.com/support/kb/doc.php?id=7017975 (#3)
Workaround:
-----------
None
Advisory URL:
-------------
https://www.sec-consult.com/en/Vulnerability-Lab/Advisories.htm
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab
SEC Consult
Bangkok - Berlin - Linz - Montreal - Moscow
Singapore - Vienna (HQ) - Vilnius - Zurich
About SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab
The SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab is an integrated part of SEC Consult. It
ensures the continued knowledge gain of SEC Consult in the field of network
and application security to stay ahead of the attacker. The SEC Consult
Vulnerability Lab supports high-quality penetration testing and the evaluation
of new offensive and defensive technologies for our customers. Hence our
customers obtain the most current information about vulnerabilities and valid
recommendation about the risk profile of new technologies.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Interested to work with the experts of SEC Consult?
Send us your application https://www.sec-consult.com/en/Career.htm
Interested in improving your cyber security with the experts of SEC Consult?
Contact our local offices https://www.sec-consult.com/en/About/Contact.htm
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mail: research at sec-consult dot com
Web: https://www.sec-consult.com
Blog: http://blog.sec-consult.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sec_consult
EOF W. Ettlinger / @2016