Millions of Internet-connected machines running the open source Exim mail server may be vulnerable to a newly disclosed vulnerability that, in some cases, allows unauthenticated attackers to execute commands with all-powerful root privileges.
The flaw, which dates back to version 4.87 released in April 2016, is trivially exploitable by local users with a low-privileged account on a vulnerable system running with default settings. All that's required is for the person to send an email to "${run{…}}@localhost," where "localhost" is an existing local domain on a vulnerable Exim installation. With that, attackers can execute commands of their choice that run with root privileges.
The command execution flaw is also exploitable remotely, albeit with some restrictions. The most likely scenario for remote exploits is when default settings have been made such as:
- The "verify = recipient" is removed manually by an administrator, possibly to prevent username enumeration using RCPT TO functions. In such a case, the local exploitation method above works.
- Exim is configured to recognize tags in the local part of a recipient's address (through "local_part_suffix = +* : -*" for example). Attackers can exploit the vulnerability by reusing the local exploit method with an RCPT TO "balrog+${run{…}}@localhost" (where "balrog" is the name of a local user).
- Exim is configured to relay mail to a remote domain, as a secondary MX. A remote attacker can reuse the local-exploitation method with an RCPT TO "${run{…}}@khazad.dum" where "khazad.dum" is one of Exim's relay_to_domains.
The vulnerability is also remotely exploitable against default Exim setups, although an attacker first must keep a connection to the vulnerable server open for seven days, by transmitting one byte every few minutes. Researchers from Qualys, the security firm that discovered the vulnerability, didn't rule out other, simpler and more practical ways to remotely exploit default setups.
"This vulnerability is trivially exploitable in the local and non-default cases (attackers will have working exploits before that, public or not)," Qualys researchers wrote in an advisory published on Wednesday. "And in the default case, a rRead More – Source
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Ars Technica
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