Vulnerabilities > CVE-2012-1514 - Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) vulnerability in VMWare Vshield Manager

047910
CVSS 6.8 - MEDIUM
Attack vector
NETWORK
Attack complexity
MEDIUM
Privileges required
NONE
Confidentiality impact
PARTIAL
Integrity impact
PARTIAL
Availability impact
PARTIAL
network
vmware
CWE-352
nessus

Summary

Cross-site request forgery (CSRF) vulnerability in VMware vShield Manager (vSM) 1.0.1 before Update 2 and 4.1.0 before Update 2 allows remote attackers to hijack the authentication of arbitrary users.

Vulnerable Configurations

Part Description Count
Application
Vmware
1

Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE)

Common Attack Pattern Enumeration and Classification (CAPEC)

  • JSON Hijacking (aka JavaScript Hijacking)
    An attacker targets a system that uses JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) as a transport mechanism between the client and the server (common in Web 2.0 systems using AJAX) to steal possibly confidential information transmitted from the server back to the client inside the JSON object by taking advantage of the loophole in the browser's Same Origin Policy that does not prohibit JavaScript from one website to be included and executed in the context of another website. An attacker gets the victim to visit his or her malicious page that contains a script tag whose source points to the vulnerable system with a URL that requests a response from the server containing a JSON object with possibly confidential information. The malicious page also contains malicious code to capture the JSON object returned by the server before any other processing on it can take place, typically by overriding the JavaScript function used to create new objects. This hook allows the malicious code to get access to the creation of each object and transmit the possibly sensitive contents of the captured JSON object to the attackers' server. There is nothing in the browser's security model to prevent the attackers' malicious JavaScript code (originating from attacker's domain) to set up an environment (as described above) to intercept a JSON object response (coming from the vulnerable target system's domain), read its contents and transmit to the attackers' controlled site. The same origin policy protects the domain object model (DOM), but not the JSON.
  • Cross-Domain Search Timing
    An attacker initiates cross domain HTTP / GET requests and times the server responses. The timing of these responses may leak important information on what is happening on the server. Browser's same origin policy prevents the attacker from directly reading the server responses (in the absence of any other weaknesses), but does not prevent the attacker from timing the responses to requests that the attacker issued cross domain. For GET requests an attacker could for instance leverage the "img" tag in conjunction with "onload() / onerror()" javascript events. For the POST requests, an attacker could leverage the "iframe" element and leverage the "onload()" event. There is nothing in the current browser security model that prevents an attacker to use these methods to time responses to the attackers' cross domain requests. The timing for these responses leaks information. For instance, if a victim has an active session with their online e-mail account, an attacker could issue search requests in the victim's mailbox. While the attacker is not able to view the responses, based on the timings of the responses, the attacker could ask yes / no questions as to the content of victim's e-mails, who the victim e-mailed, when, etc. This is but one example; There are other scenarios where an attacker could infer potentially sensitive information from cross domain requests by timing the responses while asking the right questions that leak information.
  • Cross Site Identification
    An attacker harvests identifying information about a victim via an active session that the victim's browser has with a social networking site. A victim may have the social networking site open in one tab or perhaps is simply using the "remember me" feature to keep his or her session with the social networking site active. An attacker induces a payload to execute in the victim's browser that transparently to the victim initiates a request to the social networking site (e.g., via available social network site APIs) to retrieve identifying information about a victim. While some of this information may be public, the attacker is able to harvest this information in context and may use it for further attacks on the user (e.g., spear phishing). In one example of an attack, an attacker may post a malicious posting that contains an image with an embedded link. The link actually requests identifying information from the social networking site. A victim who views the malicious posting in his or her browser will have sent identifying information to the attacker, as long as the victim had an active session with the social networking site. There are many other ways in which the attacker may get the payload to execute in the victim's browser mainly by finding a way to hide it in some reputable site that the victim visits. The attacker could also send the link to the victim in an e-mail and trick the victim into clicking on the link. This attack is basically a cross site request forgery attack with two main differences. First, there is no action that is performed on behalf of the user aside from harvesting information. So standard CSRF protection may not work in this situation. Second, what is important in this attack pattern is the nature of the data being harvested, which is identifying information that can be obtained and used in context. This real time harvesting of identifying information can be used as a prelude for launching real time targeted social engineering attacks on the victim.
  • Cross Site Request Forgery (aka Session Riding)
    An attacker crafts malicious web links and distributes them (via web pages, email, etc.), typically in a targeted manner, hoping to induce users to click on the link and execute the malicious action against some third-party application. If successful, the action embedded in the malicious link will be processed and accepted by the targeted application with the users' privilege level. This type of attack leverages the persistence and implicit trust placed in user session cookies by many web applications today. In such an architecture, once the user authenticates to an application and a session cookie is created on the user's system, all following transactions for that session are authenticated using that cookie including potential actions initiated by an attacker and simply "riding" the existing session cookie.

Nessus

NASL familyVMware ESX Local Security Checks
NASL idVMWARE_VMSA-2012-0005.NASL
descriptiona. VMware Tools Display Driver Privilege Escalation The VMware XPDM and WDDM display drivers contain buffer overflow vulnerabilities and the XPDM display driver does not properly check for NULL pointers. Exploitation of these issues may lead to local privilege escalation on Windows-based Guest Operating Systems. VMware would like to thank Tarjei Mandt for reporting theses issues to us. The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project (cve.mitre.org) has assigned the names CVE-2012-1509 (XPDM buffer overrun), CVE-2012-1510 (WDDM buffer overrun) and CVE-2012-1508 (XPDM null pointer dereference) to these issues. Note: CVE-2012-1509 doesn
last seen2020-06-01
modified2020-06-02
plugin id58362
published2012-03-16
reporterThis script is Copyright (C) 2012-2019 and is owned by Tenable, Inc. or an Affiliate thereof.
sourcehttps://www.tenable.com/plugins/nessus/58362
titleVMSA-2012-0005 : VMware vCenter Server, Orchestrator, Update Manager, vShield, vSphere Client, Workstation, Player, ESXi, and ESX address several security issues
code
#
# (C) Tenable Network Security, Inc.
#
# The descriptive text and package checks in this plugin were  
# extracted from VMware Security Advisory 2012-0005. 
# The text itself is copyright (C) VMware Inc.
#

include("compat.inc");

if (description)
{
  script_id(58362);
  script_version("1.52");
  script_cvs_date("Date: 2019/09/24 15:02:54");

  script_cve_id("CVE-2010-0405", "CVE-2011-3190", "CVE-2011-3375", "CVE-2011-3389", "CVE-2011-3546", "CVE-2011-3547", "CVE-2011-3554", "CVE-2012-0022", "CVE-2012-1508", "CVE-2012-1510", "CVE-2012-1512");
  script_bugtraq_id(43331, 49353, 49778, 50211, 50215, 50216, 50218, 50220, 50223, 50224, 50226, 50229, 50231, 50234, 50236, 50237, 50239, 50242, 50243, 50246, 50248, 50250, 51447, 52525);
  script_xref(name:"VMSA", value:"2012-0005");
  script_xref(name:"IAVB", value:"2010-B-0083");

  script_name(english:"VMSA-2012-0005 : VMware vCenter Server, Orchestrator, Update Manager, vShield, vSphere Client, Workstation, Player, ESXi, and ESX address several security issues");
  script_summary(english:"Checks esxupdate output for the patches");

  script_set_attribute(
    attribute:"synopsis", 
    value:
"The remote VMware ESXi / ESX host is missing one or more
security-related patches."
  );
  script_set_attribute(
    attribute:"description", 
    value:
"a. VMware Tools Display Driver Privilege Escalation

 The VMware XPDM and WDDM display drivers contain buffer overflow
 vulnerabilities and the XPDM display driver does not properly
 check for NULL pointers. Exploitation of these issues may lead
 to local privilege escalation on Windows-based Guest Operating
 Systems.

 VMware would like to thank Tarjei Mandt for reporting theses
 issues to us.

 The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project (cve.mitre.org)
 has assigned the names CVE-2012-1509 (XPDM buffer overrun),
 CVE-2012-1510 (WDDM buffer overrun) and CVE-2012-1508 (XPDM null
 pointer dereference) to these issues.

 Note: CVE-2012-1509 doesn't affect ESXi and ESX.

b. vSphere Client internal browser input validation vulnerability

 The vSphere Client has an internal browser that renders html
 pages from log file entries. This browser doesn't properly
 sanitize input and may run script that is introduced into the
 log files. In order for the script to run, the user would need
 to open an individual, malicious log file entry. The script
 would run with the permissions of the user that runs the vSphere
 Client.

 VMware would like to thank Edward Torkington for reporting this
 issue to us.

 The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project (cve.mitre.org)
 has assigned the name CVE-2012-1512 to this issue.

 In order to remediate the issue, the vSphere Client of the
 vSphere 5.0 Update 1 release or the vSphere 4.1 Update 2 release
 needs to be installed. The vSphere Clients that come with
 vSphere 4.0 and vCenter Server 2.5 are not affected.

c. vCenter Orchestrator Password Disclosure

 The vCenter Orchestrator (vCO) Web Configuration tool reflects
 back the vCenter Server password as part of the webpage. This
 might allow the logged-in vCO administrator to retrieve the
 vCenter Server password.

 VMware would like to thank Alexey Sintsov from Digital Security
 Research Group for reporting this issue to us.

 The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project (cve.mitre.org)
 has assigned the name CVE-2012-1513 to this issue.

d. vShield Manager Cross-Site Request Forgery vulnerability

 The vShield Manager (vSM) interface has a Cross-Site Request
 Forgery vulnerability. If an attacker can convince an
 authenticated user to visit a malicious link, the attacker may
 force the victim to forward an authenticated request to the
 server.

 VMware would like to thank Frans Pehrson of Xxor AB
 (www.xxor.se<http://www.xxor.se>) and Claudio Criscione for independently reporting
 this issue to us

 The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project (cve.mitre.org)
 has assigned the name CVE-2012-1514 to this issue.

e. vCenter Update Manager, Oracle (Sun) JRE update 1.6.0_30

 Oracle (Sun) JRE is updated to version 1.6.0_30, which addresses
 multiple security issues that existed in earlier releases of
 Oracle (Sun) JRE.

 Oracle has documented the CVE identifiers that are addressed in
 JRE 1.6.0_29 and JRE 1.6.0_30 in the Oracle Java SE Critical
 Patch Update Advisory of October 2011. The References section
 provides a link to this advisory.

f. vCenter Server Apache Tomcat update 6.0.35

 Apache Tomcat has been updated to version 6.0.35 to address
 multiple security issues.

 The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project (cve.mitre.org)
 has assigned the names CVE-2011-3190, CVE-2011-3375,
 CVE-2011-4858, and CVE-2012-0022 to these issues.


g. ESXi update to third-party component bzip2

 The bzip2 library is updated to version 1.0.6, which resolves a
 security issue.

 The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project (cve.mitre.org)
 has assigned the name CVE-2010-0405 to this issue."
  );
  script_set_attribute(
    attribute:"see_also",
    value:"http://lists.vmware.com/pipermail/security-announce/2012/000198.html"
  );
  script_set_attribute(attribute:"solution", value:"Apply the missing patches.");
  script_set_cvss_base_vector("CVSS2#AV:N/AC:L/Au:N/C:C/I:C/A:C");
  script_set_cvss_temporal_vector("CVSS2#E:U/RL:OF/RC:C");
  script_set_attribute(attribute:"exploitability_ease", value:"No known exploits are available");
  script_set_attribute(attribute:"exploit_available", value:"false");

  script_set_attribute(attribute:"plugin_type", value:"local");
  script_set_attribute(attribute:"cpe", value:"cpe:/o:vmware:esx:4.0");
  script_set_attribute(attribute:"cpe", value:"cpe:/o:vmware:esx:4.1");
  script_set_attribute(attribute:"cpe", value:"cpe:/o:vmware:esxi:4.1");
  script_set_attribute(attribute:"cpe", value:"cpe:/o:vmware:esxi:5.0");

  script_set_attribute(attribute:"patch_publication_date", value:"2012/03/15");
  script_set_attribute(attribute:"plugin_publication_date", value:"2012/03/16");
  script_set_attribute(attribute:"stig_severity", value:"I");
  script_end_attributes();

  script_category(ACT_GATHER_INFO);
  script_copyright(english:"This script is Copyright (C) 2012-2019 and is owned by Tenable, Inc. or an Affiliate thereof.");
  script_family(english:"VMware ESX Local Security Checks");

  script_dependencies("ssh_get_info.nasl");
  script_require_keys("Host/local_checks_enabled", "Host/VMware/release", "Host/VMware/version");
  script_require_ports("Host/VMware/esxupdate", "Host/VMware/esxcli_software_vibs");

  exit(0);
}


include("audit.inc");
include("vmware_esx_packages.inc");


if (!get_kb_item("Host/local_checks_enabled")) audit(AUDIT_LOCAL_CHECKS_NOT_ENABLED);
if (!get_kb_item("Host/VMware/release")) audit(AUDIT_OS_NOT, "VMware ESX / ESXi");
if (
  !get_kb_item("Host/VMware/esxcli_software_vibs") &&
  !get_kb_item("Host/VMware/esxupdate")
) audit(AUDIT_PACKAGE_LIST_MISSING);


init_esx_check(date:"2012-03-15");
flag = 0;


if (
  esx_check(
    ver           : "ESX 4.0",
    patch         : "ESX400-201110401-SG",
    patch_updates : make_list("ESX400-201111201-SG", "ESX400-201203401-SG", "ESX400-201205401-SG", "ESX400-201206401-SG", "ESX400-201209401-SG", "ESX400-201302401-SG", "ESX400-201305401-SG", "ESX400-201310401-SG", "ESX400-201404401-SG", "ESX400-Update04")
  )
) flag++;

if (
  esx_check(
    ver           : "ESX 4.1",
    patch         : "ESX410-201110201-SG",
    patch_updates : make_list("ESX410-201201401-SG", "ESX410-201204401-SG", "ESX410-201205401-SG", "ESX410-201206401-SG", "ESX410-201208101-SG", "ESX410-201211401-SG", "ESX410-201301401-SG", "ESX410-201304401-SG", "ESX410-201307401-SG", "ESX410-201312401-SG", "ESX410-201404401-SG", "ESX410-Update02", "ESX410-Update03")
  )
) flag++;
if (
  esx_check(
    ver           : "ESX 4.1",
    patch         : "ESX410-201208101-SG",
    patch_updates : make_list("ESX410-201211401-SG", "ESX410-201301401-SG", "ESX410-201304401-SG", "ESX410-201307401-SG", "ESX410-201312401-SG", "ESX410-201404401-SG", "ESX410-Update03")
  )
) flag++;

if (
  esx_check(
    ver           : "ESXi 4.1",
    patch         : "ESXi410-201110202-UG",
    patch_updates : make_list("ESXi410-Update02", "ESXi410-Update03")
  )
) flag++;

if (esx_check(ver:"ESXi 5.0", vib:"VMware:esx-base:5.0.0-0.10.608089")) flag++;


if (flag)
{
  if (report_verbosity > 0) security_hole(port:0, extra:esx_report_get());
  else security_hole(0);
  exit(0);
}
else audit(AUDIT_HOST_NOT, "affected");