Severity: critical

Affected versions:

- Apache Jackrabbit Webapp (jackrabbit-webapp) 2.21.0 before 2.21.18
- Apache Jackrabbit Webapp (jackrabbit-webapp) 1.0.0 before 2.20.11
- Apache Jackrabbit Standalone (jackrabbit-standalone and 
jackrabbit-standalone-components) 2.21.0 before 2.21.18
- Apache Jackrabbit Standalone (jackrabbit-standalone and 
jackrabbit-standalone-components) 1.0.0 before 2.20.11

Description:

Java object deserialization issue in Jackrabbit webapp/standalone on all 
platforms allows attacker to remotely execute code via RMIVersions up to 
(including) 2.20.10 (stable branch) and 2.21.17 (unstable branch) use the 
component "commons-beanutils", which contains a class that can be used for 
remote code execution over RMI.

Users are advised to immediately update to versions 2.20.11 or 2.21.18. Note 
that earlier stable branches (1.0.x .. 2.18.x) have been EOLd already and do 
not receive updates anymore.

In general, RMI support can expose vulnerabilities by the mere presence of an 
exploitable class on the classpath. Even if Jackrabbit itself does not contain 
any code known to be exploitable anymore, adding other components to your 
server can expose the same type of problem. We therefore recommend to disable 
RMI access altogether (see further below), and will discuss deprecating RMI 
support in future Jackrabbit releases.

How to check whether RMI support is enabledRMI support can be over an 
RMI-specific TCP port, and over an HTTP binding. Both are by default enabled in 
Jackrabbit webapp/standalone.

The native RMI protocol by default uses port 1099. To check whether it is 
enabled, tools like "netstat" can be used to check.

RMI-over-HTTP in Jackrabbit by default uses the path "/rmi". So when running 
standalone on port 8080, check whether an HTTP GET request on 
localhost:8080/rmi returns 404 (not enabled) or 200 (enabled). Note that the 
HTTP path may be different when the webapp is deployed in a container as 
non-root context, in which case the prefix is under the user's control.

Turning off RMIFind web.xml (either in JAR/WAR file or in unpacked web 
application folder), and remove the declaration and the mapping definition for 
the RemoteBindingServlet:

        <servlet>
            <servlet-name>RMI</servlet-name>
            
<servlet-class>org.apache.jackrabbit.servlet.remote.RemoteBindingServlet</servlet-class>
        </servlet>

        <servlet-mapping>
            <servlet-name>RMI</servlet-name>
            <url-pattern>/rmi</url-pattern>
        </servlet-mapping>

Find the bootstrap.properties file (in $REPOSITORY_HOME), and set

         rmi.enabled=false

    and also remove

         rmi.host
         rmi.port
         rmi.url-pattern

 If there is no file named bootstrap.properties in $REPOSITORY_HOME, it is 
located somewhere in the classpath. In this case, place a copy in 
$REPOSITORY_HOME and modify it as explained.

Credit:

Siebene@ (reporter)
Michael Dürig (other)
Manfred Baedke (other)

References:

https://lists.apache.org/list.html?us...@jackrabbit.apache.org
https://jackrabbit.apache.org/
https://www.cve.org/CVERecord?id=CVE-2023-37895

Timeline:

2023-06-30: Reported
2023-07-20: Release vote for unstable branch with fix
2023-07-20: Release vote for stable branch with fix
2023-07-24: unstable branch (2.21.18) released
2023-07-24: stable branch (2.20.11) released

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