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Internet Explorer Compressed Content URL Heap Overflow
Vulnerability #2 http://research.eeye.com/html/advisories/published/AD20060912.html Release Date: September 12, 2006 Date Reported: August 24, 2006 Severity: High (Code Execution) Systems Affected: Internet Explorer 5 SP4 with MS06-042 - Windows 2000 Internet Explorer 6 SP1 with MS06-042 v1 or v2 - Windows
2000 Internet Explorer 6 SP1 with MS06-042 v1 or v2 - Windows XP
SP1 Internet Explorer 6 SP1 with MS06-042 v1 or v2 - Windows
Server 2003 SP0 Overview: eEye Digital Security has discovered a second heap overflow
vulnerability in the MS06-042 cumulative Internet Explorer update that would
allow an attacker to execute arbitrary code on the system of a victim who
attempts to access a malicious URL. Windows 2000, Windows XP SP1, and
Windows 2003 SP0 systems running Internet Explorer 5 SP4 or Internet Explorer 6
SP1, with the MS06-042 patch applied, are vulnerable; unpatched and more recent
versions of Internet Explorer are not affected. This heap overflow is almost identical to the previous
vulnerability reported by eEye and addressed in the August 24th re-release
("v2") of MS06-042. In this case, the heap overflow occurs when
URLMON.DLL attempts to handle a long URL for which the web server's response
indicated GZIP or deflate encoding, if that URL was returned as the destination
of an HTTP redirect (e.g., "302 Found"). This means that the
user interaction requirement for this attack is negligible, since clicking a
hyperlink, visiting a malicious web page, or even attempting to view an image
for which the source is a malicious URL, permits exploitation of the
vulnerability. Technical Details: URLMON.DLL versions 5.0.3841.2400, 6.0.2800.1565, and
6.0.2800.1567, distributed with the MS06-042 patches for Internet Explorer 5
SP4 and Internet Explorer 6 SP1 on Windows 2000, Windows XP SP1, and Windows
2003 SP0, contain a heap buffer overflow vulnerability due to an incongruous
use of lstrcpynA. CMimeFt::Create allocates a 390h-byte heap block for a
new instance of the CMimeFt class, within which there is a 104h (MAX_PATH)-byte
ASCII string buffer at offset +160h: 1A4267F8
push
390h ; cb 1A4267FD
call [EMAIL PROTECTED]@Z ; operator new(uint) When an access to a URL elicits an HTTP redirect (statuses
300 through 303) from the web server, and the subsequent access to the
"Location" URL returns a GZIP- or deflate-encoded response,
CMimeFt::ReportProgress will attempt to copy the URL into the 104h-byte string
buffer using the lstrcpynA API function, but it passes a maximum length
argument of 824h (2084 decimal), a value typically used as the maximum length
of a URL: 1A425D41
push
824h ;
iMaxLength 1A425D46
push
eax ;
lpString2 1A425D47 add
esi, 15Ch 1A425D4C
push
esi ;
lpString1 1A425D4D
call ds:lstrcpynA As a result, fields within the CMimeFt class instance, as
well as the contents of adjacent heap blocks, can be overwritten with
attacker-supplied data from the malicious URL. Windows XP SP2 and Windows 2003 SP1 are not susceptible
because the URLMON.DLLs included in the MS06-042 patches for those systems use
824h both as the field size and as the copy length limit, in all the relevant
locations in the code. The QFE branches of MS06-042 even for the
above-mentioned vulnerable versions of Windows and Internet Explorer are not
susceptible for the same reason; it is unclear why this fix was repeatedly
re-implemented, in many cases incorrectly, when proper implementations have
existed since August 8th. Protection: Retina Network Security Scanner has been updated to identify
this vulnerability. Vendor Status: Microsoft has released a third version of the MS06-042 patch
to correct this vulnerability. The revised patch is available at: http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS06-042.mspx. Note that installing the original release or first
re-release of the MS06-042 update causes a system to become vulnerable, so
applying the version 3.0 release of the MS06-042 patch will then be necessary
in order to secure that system. Systems with the QFE version of the MS06-042 v1 or MS06-042
v2 / KB923762 hotfix applied are not susceptible to this vulnerability,
although the MS06-042 v3.0 patch should still be installed on these
systems. (Note that the QFE DLL is only selected in specific, rare
circumstances, so most likely applying MS06-042 v1 or v2 will deploy the
vulnerable GDR-branch DLL instead.) Credit: Derek Soeder Related Links: Retina Network Security Scanner – (http://www.eeye.com/html/products/retina/index.html) Blink Endpoint Vulnerability Prevention – (http://www.eeye.com/html/products/blink/index.html) Greetings: Eric B. for discovering and contributing the
premier.microsoft.com proof-of-concept URL. 3x charm. Copyright (c) 1998-2006 eEye Digital Security Permission is hereby granted for the redistribution of this
alert electronically. It is not to be edited in any way without express
consent of eEye. If you wish to reprint the whole or any part of this
alert in any other medium excluding electronic medium, please email
[EMAIL PROTECTED] for permission. Disclaimer The information within this paper may change without
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IS condition. There are no warranties, implied or express, with regard to
this information. In no event shall the author be liable for any direct
or indirect damages whatsoever arising out of or in connection with the use or
spread of this information. Any use of this information is at the user's
own risk. |
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