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| Subject: | Re: [Full-disclosure] MSIE (mshtml.dll) OBJECT tag vulnerability |
|---|---|
| Date: | Mon, 24 Apr 2006 16:18:08 -0500 |
Perhaps not surprisingly, there appears to be a vulnerability in
how
Microsoft Internet Explorer handles (or fails to handle) certain combinations of nested OBJECT tags. This was tested with MSIE 6.0.2900.2180.xpsp.040806-1825 and mshtml.dll 6.00.2900.2873 xpsp_sp2_gdr.060322-1613. At first sight, this vulnerability may offer a remote compromise
vector,
although not necessarily a reliable one. The error is convoluted
and
difficult to debug in absence of sources; as such, I cannot offer
a
definitive attack scenario, nor rule out that my initial
diagnosis will be
proved wrong [*]. As such, panic, but only slightly.
Probably the easiest way to trigger the problem is as follows:
perl -e '{print "<STYLE></STYLE>\n<OBJECT>\nBork\n"x32}'
test.html
...this will (usually) cause a NULL pointer + fixed offset
(eax+0x28)
dereference in mshtml.dll, the pointer being read from allocated
but still
zeroed memory region. The aforementioned condition is not exploitable, but padding the
page with
preceeding OBJECT tag (and other tags), increasing the number of
nested
OBJECTs, and most importantly, adding bogus 'type=' parameters of
various
length to the final sequence of OBJECTs, will cause that
dereference to
become non-NULL on many installations; then, a range of other
interesting
faults should ensue, including dereferences of variable bogus
addresses
close to stack, or crashes later on, when the page is reloaded or
closed.
[ In absence of sources, I do not understand the precise
underlying
mechanics of the bug, and I am not inclined to spend hours with
a
debugger to find out. I'm simply judging by the symptoms, but
these
seem to be indicative of an exploitable flaw. ] Several examples of pages that cause distinct faults in my setup
(your
mileage may and probably WILL vary; on three test machines, this
worked as
described; on one, all examples behaved in non-exploitable 0x28
way):
http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/iedie2-1.html (eax=0x0, instant
dereference)
http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/iedie2-2.html (bogus esi on
reload/leave)
http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/iedie2-3.html (page fault on browser
close)
http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/iedie2-4.html (bogus esi on
reload/leave)
Well, that's it. Feel free to research this further. This
vulnerability,
as requested by customers, is released in strict observance of
the Patch
Wednesday & Bug Saturday policy. [*] The ability of the attacker to document the attack scenario
probably
doesn't matter for those who pretend to care; cryptic "hi" to
Secunia and their standards of conduct.
Sir, You work very well! I think you must also pester Microsoft. I also remember LSD pesters Microsoft and they were rapidly sold out. Concerned about your privacy? Instantly send FREE secure email, no account required http://www.hushmail.com/send?l=480 Get the best prices on SSL certificates from Hushmail https://www.hushssl.com?l=485 _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/
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