Symantec's Altiris Deployment Solution contains vulnerabilities that could potentially be leveraged for unauthorized file access or a denial of service on a client system, authentication bypass on the Server to local system-level access on a client system.
Product
|
Version
|
Build
|
Solution(s)
—|—|—|—
Altiris Deployment Solution
|
6.9.x
|
All
|
6.9 SP3 Build 430
Severity
Low to High
Remote Access
|
Yes, Adjacent Network
—|—
Local Access
|
No
Authentication Required
|
No
Exploit publicly available
|
No
Details
Symantec was notified of issues impacting the Symantec Altiris Deployment Solution during client/server communications.
The DBManager authentication can potentially be bypassed. The DBManager is assigned a default listening port. A malicious user with authorized network access and working knowledge of the command structure of the DBManager could potentially pass unauthenticated commands remotely to this service. Successful exploitation of this issue could potentially result in the malicious user being able to modify the Altiris Database to add/remove users and access or potentially modify currently scheduled tasks which could adversely impact multiple clients. This is considered a high severity issue.
The Aclient GUI is not fully protected from unauthorized access. While the installation directory is protected, the Everyone user group is implemented with full control of the client executable by default. A non-privileged user could potentially use Everyone user group access to maliciously modify the client with arbitrary code. The GUI binary runs with logged on user privileges by default. Should any other privileged user log into the client, the results could be a potential elevation of privilege and compromise of the client system. This issue has a potentially high severity.
When using AClient agent of the Symantec Altiris Deployment Solution, an option is available to provide key-based authentication between the deployment server and a client system. Once authentication has been implemented, communications between the client and server is secure. However, there is a small window of vulnerability, just prior to the authentication handshake when authentication can potentially be bypassed, e.g., when the client system is just being booted or having to reconnect to the deployment solution server. At this point, a malicious individual on the network with access to or the ability to impersonate a deployment server could issue alternate commands to a client just prior to the handshake. If successful, the client would accept these commands as valid and implement them with SYSTEM level privileges. A malicious user, with sufficient access to the network, could potential disrupt communications between the deployment server and a client system and exploit the automatic reconnection by the client to attempt an attack of this nature. This is considered a medium severity issue.
The functionality of the Symantec Altiris Deployment Solution includes the ability to transfer files from the server to the deployed clients. A malicious user with network access and knowledge of the port assigned for file transfer can potentially exploit a race condition by making successive multiple connections to this port to intercept the content of these files prior to legitimate clients accessing them. Done successfully, this can result in unauthorized file access and/or a potential partial denial of service. Once the files have been downloaded from the deployment server, the server assumes they were received by an authorized client and no longer attempts to update the client with those updates.
With encryption enabled, the result of any unauthorized file access would only be a partial denial of service of authorized client systems failing to receive the available update(s). This is considered a low severity issue.
Symantec Response
Symantec engineers have verified these findings and released an update to resolve this issue.
Upgrade to at least version 6.9 SP3 Build 430. as follows:
Best Practices
As part of normal best practices, Symantec strongly recommends:
Symantec would like to thank Luke Jennings with MWRInfosecurity for reporting these issues and providing full coordination and assistance while Symantec resolved them.
SecurityFocus, http://www.securityfocus.com, has assigned Bugtraq IDs (BID) to these issues for inclusion in the SecurityFocus vulnerability database. The BIDs assigned are
36110 for the first issue, DBManager authentication bypass
36111 for the second issue, client privilege elevation
36112 for the third issue, race condition unauthorized file access/denial of service
36113 for the forth issue, client/server communications authentication bypass
These issues are candidates for inclusion in the CVE list (http://cve.mitre.org), which standardizes names for security problems. The following CVE IDs have been assigned to these issues
CVE-2009-3107 for the DBManager authentication bypass
CVE-2009-3108 for the client privilege elevation
CVE-2009-3110 for the race condition unauthorized file access/denial of service
CVE-2009-3109 for the client/server communications authentication bypass
9/9/2009 Updated the CVE IDs assigned to these issues