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[NEWS] Firefox Popup Blocker Allows Reading Arbitrary Local Files

Subject: [NEWS] Firefox Popup Blocker Allows Reading Arbitrary Local Files
Date: 5 Feb 2007 17:52:53 +0200
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  Firefox Popup Blocker Allows Reading Arbitrary Local Files
------------------------------------------------------------------------


SUMMARY

There is an interesting vulnerability in the default behavior of Firefox 
built-in popup blocker. This vulnerability, coupled with an additional 
trick, allows the attacker to read arbitrary user-accessible files on the 
system, and thus steal some fairly sensitive information.

DETAILS

Vulnerable Systems:
 * Firefox version 1.5.0.9

For security reasons, Firefox does not allow Internet-originating websites 
to access the file:// namespace. When the user chooses to manually allow a 
blocked popup however, normal URL permission checks are bypassed. The 
attacker may fool the browser to parse a chosen HTML document stored on 
the local filesystem, and because Firefox security manager treats all 
file:/// URLs as having "same origin", such a document could read other 
local files at its discretion with the use of XMLHttpRequest, and relay 
that information to a remote server.

Now, to make the attack effective, the attacker would need to plant a 
predictably named file with exploit code on the target system. This sounds 
hard, but isn't: Firefox sometimes creates outright deterministic 
temporary filenames in system-wide temporary directory when opening files 
with external applications; even if we ignore this possibility (since it 
requires the user to take an additional step that may be difficult to 
justify), "random" temporary files are created using a flawed algorithm in 
nsExternalAppHandler::SetUpTempFile and other locations.

The problem here is that stdlib linear congruential PRNG (srand/rand) is 
seeded immediately prior to file creation with current time in seconds 
(actually, microseconds, but divided by 1e6); rand() is then used in 
direct succession to produce an "unpredictable" file name. Normally, were 
the PRNG seeded once on program start and then subsequently invoked, 
results would be deterministic, but difficult to blindly predict in the 
real world; but here, the job is much easier: we know when the download 
start, we know what the seed would be, and how many subsequent calls to it 
are made - we know the output.

In a different setting, there would be a level of uncertainty caused by 
the fact that system clocks tend to drift or have imprecise settings 
(although today, most Windows systems either synchronize with Windows 
Time, or domain time services, so this is less of a factor). Still, 
there's a yet another nail to the coffin: on first call, Javascript 
Math.random() is seeded using the same call in the same manner, PR_Now() * 
1e-6. The seed, and hence a time very close to the moment of file 
creation, can be trivially computed by analyzing Math.random() output. But 
wait, why bother at all - Javascript can be used to directly read system 
clock with a 1-second resolution.

One of several attack scenarios Michal could think of might look as 
follows:
1) Have user click on a link on a malicious page. The link would point to 
"evil.cgi", and have onClick handler set to function foo(). This function 
would acquire current system time, and use setTimeout to invoke 
window.open("p2.html?" + curtime,"new",""); in 100 ms. The aforementioned 
cgi script would return:

     Content-type: text/html
     Content-disposition: attachment; filename="foo.html"

     <html><body><script>
     x = new XMLHttpRequest;
     x.open("GET", "file:///c:/BOOT.ini", false);
     x.send(null);
     alert("The script attempted to read your C:/BOOT.ini:\n\n"
           + x.responseText);
     </script>

2) After user clicks the link, a download prompt will appear, and a copy 
of evil.cgi output would be saved in - for example - 
C:\WINDOWS\TEMP\c3o89nr7.htm. The download prompt will be immediately 
hidden under the newly created p2.html window (this, by default, bypasses 
popup blocker. because the window is created in response to user action).

3) The page currently displayed on top, p2.html, instructs the user to 
accept the popup to open a movie player or whatnot; since unsolicited 
popups are an annoyance, not a security risk, even an educated user is 
likely to comply.

To create a popup warning, a script embedded on the page calls: 
window.open('file:///c:/windows/temp/xxxxxxx.htm','new2',''),

with a name calculated by repeating a procedure implemented in 
SetUpTempFile() with a seed calculated by the server based on reported 
system time (p2.html?time).

4) When the user opens that particular popup, attacker-supplied HTML file 
is loaded and executed with local file read privileges (in the 
aforementioned example, the contents of BOOT.ini file would be reported 
back to the victim).


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

The information has been provided by  <mailto:lcamtuf@dione.ids.pl> Michal 
Zalewski.



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