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NVIDIA: Stereoscopic 3D Driver Service Arbitrary Run Key Creation #515

Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
NVIDIA: Stereoscopic 3D Driver Service Arbitrary Run Key Creation 
Platform: Windows, NVIDIA Service Version 7.17.13.5382
Class: Elevation of Privilege, Remote Code Execution

Summary:
The 3D Vision service nvSCPAPISvr.exe installed as part of typical driver 
installations runs at Local System and has an insecure named pipe server. One 
of the commands in the server can be used to set an Explorer Run key for the 
system which would allow a user to get code executing in the session of any 
other user who logs on to the same machine leading to elevation of privilege. 
In Windows Domain environments it would also be possible to exploit the 
vulnerability between machines if the attacker has access to a valid user 
account on one domain joined machine. 

Description:

The NVIDIA Stereoscopic 3D Driver Service exposes the named pipe 
“stereosvrpipe” which implements a simple command response service. One of 
the commands (number 2) will write an arbitrary value to a fixed set of two 
registry keys, one which is specific to NVIDIA (no effort has been made to 
determine if this could be abused) and also the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE explorer Run 
key. This Run key is inspected when a new copy of the Windows Explorer shell is 
started, any values are treated as command lines to execute. Therefore any user 
on the system can create an arbitrary run key entry and get their own commands 
to execute in the security context of any other user (such as an administrator) 
who logs into the system to interact with the desktop.

The named pipe is not locked down to prevent abuse, in fact it’s given a NULL 
DACL which means that any user can open the device, although it can’t be 
exploited from typical application sandboxes such as Chrome or IE. When the 
pipe is created no attempt is made to prevent remote access to the pipe (by 
passing the PIPE_REJECT_REMOTE_CLIENTS) flag. This means that the service can 
also be exposed to external systems, assuming the client has valid credentials 
(or is running within a session which can use Integrated Authentication). This 
is probably most dangerous in a Windows Domain Environment.

Finally the service has a potentially memory corruption issue when handling the 
registry key path. When reading a string from the named pipe the code doesn’t 
ensure the string is NUL terminated. Instead it’s passed to a function to 
verify that the path is prefixed with one of the valid registry keys. The code 
for this check is roughly:

BOOLEAN is_string_prefixed(char *read_str, char *prefix)
{
  int ret = FALSE;
  int prefix_len = strlen(prefix);
  if ( read_str && strlen(read_str) >= prefix_len )
  {
    char old_char = read_str[prefix_len];
    read_str[prefix_len] = 0;
    if ( !_strnicmp(read_str, prefix, prefix_len) )
      ret = TRUE;
    read_str[prefix_len] = old_char;
  }
  return ret;
}

If the passed string is not NUL terminated then this code will cause temporary 
memory corruption. For example if the passed string is exactly the same size as 
the prefix then the code will write the 0 one character off the end of the 
allocated buffer. Also if the read string’s size is less than the length of 
the prefix but the original allocation has non NUL data the zero could be 
written into another valid block. As the function restores the original value 
it’s unlikely to be reliably exploitable. However there’s actually no 
reason to do the overwrite as the code is already using strnicmp which will 
only check up to the prefix size. 

In summary there are at least 4 issues with the service:
1) Service exposes the ability to create an arbitrary system wide run key entry
2) When creating the named pipe the PIPE_REJECT_REMOTE_CLIENTS is not passed 
meaning it can be connected to remotely to exploit the vulnerability.
3) The pipe has a NULL DACL which allows any user to connect to it
4) The processing of the registry key path has potential for memory corruption.

Proof of Concept:
I’ve provided a proof of concept, in C# which will need to be compiled. You 
can use the csc compiler which comes with the .NET framework.

Expected Result:
The pipe service can't be connected to or it doesn't write the registry key.

Observed Result:
A new run key is present in HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run 
which executes notepad (note on 64bit systems it will actually be under the 
Wow6432Node as the service is 32bit, but it will still execute).

This bug is subject to a 90 day disclosure deadline. If 90 days elapse
without a broadly available patch, then the bug report will automatically
become visible to the public.

Original issue reported on code.google.com by fors...@google.com on 4 Sep 2015 at 3:22

Attachments:

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago

Original comment by scvi...@google.com on 19 Nov 2015 at 3:31

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Fixed in http://nvidia.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/3807.

Original comment by fors...@google.com on 20 Nov 2015 at 3:34

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago

Original comment by fors...@google.com on 21 Nov 2015 at 11:40