How serious is this new ASP.NET security vulnerability and how can I workaround it?
I've just read on the net about a newly discovered security vulnerability in ASP.NET. You can read the details here.
The problem lies in the way that ASP.NET implements the AES encryption algorithm to protect the integrity of the cookies these applications generate to store information during user sessions.
This is a bit vague, but here is a more frightening part:
The first stage of the attack takes a few thousand requests, but once it succeeds and the attacker gets the secret keys, it's totally stealthy.The cryptographic knowledge required is very basic.
All in all, I'm not familiar enough with the security/cryptograpy subject to know if this is really that serious.
So, should all ASP.NET developers fear this technique that can own any ASP.NET website in seconds or what?
How does this issue affect the average ASP.NET developer? Does it affect us at all? In real life, what are the consequences of this vulnerability? And, finally: is there some workaround that prevents this vulnerability?
Thanks for your answers!
EDIT: Let me summarize the responses I got
So, this is basically a "padding oracle" type of attack. @Sri provided a great explanation about what does this type of attack mean. Here is a shocking video about the issue!
About the seriousness of this vulnerability: Yes, it is indeed serious. It lets the attacker to get to know the machine key of an application. Thus, he can do some very unwanted things.
- In posession of the app's machine key, the attacker can decrypt authentication cookies.
- Even worse than that, he can generate authentication cookies with the name of any user. Thus, he can appear as anyone on the site. The application is unable to differentiate between you or the hacker who generated an authentication cookie with your name for himself.
- It also lets him to decrypt (and also generate) session cookies, although this is not as dangerous as the previous one.
- Not so serious: He can decrypt the encrypted ViewState of pages. (If you use ViewState to store confidental data, you shouldn't do this anyways!)
- Quite unexpected: With the knowledge of the machine key, the attacker can download any arbitrary file from your web application, even those that normally can't be downloaded! (Including Web.Config, etc.)
Here is a bunch of good practices I got that don't solve the issue but help improve the general security of a web application.
- You can encrypt sensitive data with Protected Configuration
- Use HTTP Only cookies
- Prevent DoS attacks
Now, let's focus on this issue.
- Scott Guthrie published an entry about it on his blog
- ScottGu's FAQ blog post about the vulnerability
- ScottGu's update on the vulnerability
- Microsoft has a security advisory about it
- Understanding the vulnerability
- Additional information about the vulnerability
The solution
- Enable customErrors and make a single error page to which all errors are redirected. Yes, even 404s. (ScottGu said that differentiating between 404s and 500s are essential for this attack.) Also, into your
Application_Error
orError.aspx
put some code that makes a random delay. (Generate a random number, and use Thread.Sleep to sleep for that long.) This will make it impossible for the attacker to decide what exactly happened on your server. - Some people recommended switching back to 3DES. In theory, if you don't use AES, you don't encounter the security weakness in the AES implementation. As it turns out, this is not recommended at all.
Some other thoughts
- Seems that not everyone thinks the workaround is good enough.
Thanks to everyone who answered my question. I learned a lot about not only this issue, but web security in general. I marked @Mikael's answer as accepted, but the other answers are also very useful.
What should I do to protect myself?
[Update 2010-09-29]
Microsoft security bulletin
KB Article with reference to the fix
ScottGu has links for the downloads
[Update 2010-09-25]
While we are waiting for the fix, yesterday ScottGu postet an update on how to add an extra step to protect your sites with a custom URLScan rule.
Basically make sure you provide a custom error page so that an attacker is not exposed to internal .Net errors, which you always should anyways in release/production mode.
Additionally add a random time sleep in the error page to prevent the attacker from timing the responses for added attack information.
In web.config
<configuration>
<location allowOverride="false">
<system.web>
<customErrors mode="On" defaultRedirect="~/error.html" />
</system.web>
</location>
</configuration>
This will redirect any error to a custom page returned with a 200 status code. This way an attacker cannot look at the error code or error information for information needed for further attacks.
It is also safe to set customErrors mode="RemoteOnly"
, as this will redirect "real" clients. Only browsing from localhost will show internal .Net errors.
The important part is to make sure that all errors are configured to return the same error page. This requires you to explicitly set the defaultRedirect
attribute on the <customErrors>
section and ensure that no per-status codes are set.
What's at stake?
If an attacker manage to use the mentioned exploit, he/she can download internal files from within your web application. Typically web.config is a target and may contain sensitive information like login information in a database connection string, or even link to an automouted sql-express database which you don't want someone to get hold of. But if you are following best practice you use Protected Configuration to encrypt all sensitive data in your web.config.
Links to references
Read Microsoft's official comment about the vulnerability at http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/advisory/2416728.mspx. Specifically the "Workaround" part for implementation details on this issue.
Also some information on ScottGu's blog, including a script to find vulnerable ASP.Net apps on your web server.
For an explanation on "Understanding Padding Oracle Attacks", read @sri's answer.
Comments to the article:
The attack that Rizzo and Duong have implemented against ASP.NET apps requires that the crypto implementation on the Web site have an oracle that, when sent ciphertext, will not only decrypt the text but give the sender a message about whether the padding in the ciphertext is valid.
If the padding is invalid, the error message that the sender gets will give him some information about the way that the site's decryption process works.
In order for the attack to work the following must be true:
- Your application must give an error message about the padding being invalid.
- Someone must tamper with your encrypted cookies or viewstate
So, if you return human readable error messages in your app like "Something went wrong, please try again" then you should be pretty safe. Reading a bit on the comments on the article also gives valuable information.
- Store a session id in the crypted cookie
- Store the real data in session state (persisted in a db)
- Add a random wait when user information is wrong before returning the error, so you can't time it
That way a hijacked cookie can only be used to retrieve a session which most likely is no longer present or invalidated.
It will be interesting to see what is actually presented at the Ekoparty conference, but right now I'm not too worried about this vulnerability.
Understanding Padding Oracle Attacks
Lets assume your application accepts an encrypted string as a parameter - whether the parameter is a cookie, a url parameter or something else is immaterial. When the application tries to decode it, there are 3 possible outcomes -
Outcome 1 : The encrypted string decrypted properly, and the application was able to make sense of it. Meaning, if the encrypted string was an 10 digit account number, after decryption the application found something like "1234567890" and not "abcd1213ef"
Outcome 2 : The padding was correct, but after decryption the string obtained was gibberish that the app couldn't understand. For example, the string decrypted to "abcd1213ef", but the app was expecting only numbers. Most apps will show a message like "Invalid account number".
Outcome 3 : The padding was incorrect, and the application threw some kind of error message. Most apps will show a generic message like "Some error occurred".
In order for a Padding Oracle attack to be successful, the attacker must be able to make several thousands of requests, and must be able to classify the response into one of the above 3 buckets without error.
If these two conditions are met, the attacker can eventually decrypt the message, and then re-encrypt it with whatever he wishes. Its just a question of time.
What can be done to prevent it?
Simplest thing - anything sensitive should never be sent to the client, encrypted or no encrypted. Keep it on the server.
Make sure that outcome 2 and outcome 3 in the above list appear exactly the same to the attacker. There should be no way to figure out one from the other. This is not all that easy, though - an attacker can discriminate using some kind of timing attack.
As a last line of defence, have a Web Application Firewall. The padding oracle attack needs to make several requests that look almost similar (changing one bit at a time), so it should be possible for a WAF to catch and block such requests.
P.S. A good explanation of Padding Oracle Attacks can be found in this blog post. Disclaimer: Its NOT my blog.
From what I read until now...
The attack allows someone to decrypt sniffed cookies, which could contain valuable data such as bank balances
They need the encrypted cookie of a user that have been already logged in, on any account. They also need to find data in cookies - I hope that developers do not store critical data in cookies :). And there is a way that I have below to not let asp.net store data in the login cookie.
How can someone get the cookie of a user that is online if he doesn't get his hands on the browser data? Or sniff the IP packet ?
One way to prevent that is to not allow cookies to transport without ssl encryption.
<httpCookies httpOnlyCookies="true" requireSSL="true" />
Also one more measure is to prevent storing Roles in cookies.
<roleManager enabled="true" cacheRolesInCookie="false">
Now about the cookies that are not secure for the regular pages, this needs some more thinking what you left your user do and what not, how you trust him, what extra check you can do (for example if you see a change on the ip, maybe stop trust him until relogin from security page).
Reference:
Can some hacker steal the cookie from a user and login with that name on a web site?
How to check from where attacks come and not give back informations. I wrote here a simple way to prevent the padding is invalid and logging at the same time to track down attackers: CryptographicException: Padding is invalid and cannot be removed and Validation of viewstate MAC failed
The way to track the attacker is to check the padding is invalid. With a simple procedure you can track them down and block them - they need some thousands of call on your page to find the key !
Update 1.
I have download the tool that suppose that's find the KEY and decrypt the data, and as I say its trap on the above code that's check the viewstate. From my tests this tool have many more to fix, for example can not scan compressed view state as it is and its crash on my tests.
If some one try to use this tool or this method the above code can track them down and you can block them out of your page with simple code like this one "Prevent Denial Of Service (DOS)", or like this code for preventing Denial of service.
Update 2
Its seems from what I read until now that the only think that is really need it to not give information back about the error, and just place a custom error page and if you like you can just create and a random delay to this page.
a very interesting video on this issue.
So all the above its more measure for more protections but not 100% necessaries for this particular issue. For example to use ssl cookie is solve the snif issue, the not cache the Roles in cookies it good to not send and get back big cookies, and to avoid some one that have all ready crack the code, to just place the admin role on the cookie of him.
The viewstate track its just one more measure to find attack.
Here is the MS response. It all boils down to "use a custom error page" and you won't be giving away any clues.
EDIT
Here is some more detailed info from scottgu.
Adding ScottGu's responses taken from discussion at http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2010/09/18/important-asp-net-security-vulnerability.aspx
Is custom IHttpModule instead of customErrors affected?
Q: I don't have a element declared in my web.config, I have instead an IHttpModule inside the section. This module logs the error and redirects to either a search page (for 404's) or to an error page (for 500's). Am I vulnerable?
A: I would recommend temporarily updating the module to always redirect to the search page. One of the ways this attack works is that looks for differentiation between 404s and 500 errors. Always returning the same HTTP code and sending them to the same place is one way to help block it.
Note that when the patch comes out to fix this, you won't need to do this (and can revert back to the old behavior). But for right now I'd recommend not differentiating between 404s and 500s to clients.
Can I continue using different errors for 404 and 500 errors?
Q: I take it we can still have a custom 404 page defined in addition to the default redirect on error, without violating the principles described above?
A: No - until we release a patch for the real fix, we recommend the above workaround which homogenizes all errors. One of the ways this attack works is that looks for differentiation between 404s and 500 errors. Always returning the same HTTP code and sending them to the same place is one way to help block it.
Note that when the patch comes out to fix this, you won't need to do this (and can revert back to the old behavior). But for right now you should not differentiate between 404s and 500s to clients.
How does this allow exposure of web.config?
Q: How does this allow exposure of web.config? This seems to enable decrypting of ViewState only, is there another related vulnerability that also allows the information disclosure? Is there a whitepaper that details the attack for a better explanation of what's going on?
A: The attack that was shown in the public relies on a feature in ASP.NET that allows files (typically javascript and css) to be downloaded, and which is secured with a key that is sent as part of the request. Unfortunately if you are able to forge a key you can use this feature to download the web.config file of an application (but not files outside of the application). We will obviously release a patch for this - until then the above workaround closes the attack vector.
EDIT: additional FAQ available in the second blogpost at http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2010/09/20/frequently-asked-questions-about-the-asp-net-security-vulnerability.aspx