In CBC, the encryption uses the **previous encrypted block as IV** to XOR with the following block as you can see in the following image taken from [Wikipedia](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_cipher_mode_of_operation):
As the encryption is performed in **fixed****size****blocks**, **padding** is usually needed in the **last****block** to complete its length.
Usually **PKCS7** is used, which generates a padding **repeating** the **number** of **bytes****needed** to **complete** the block. For example, if the last block is missing 3 bytes, the padding will be `\x03\x03\x03`.
When an application decrypts encrypted data, it will first decrypt the data; then it will remove the padding. During the cleanup of the padding, **if** an **invalid****padding** triggers a detectable **behaviour**, you have a **padding oracle vulnerability**. The detectable behaviour can be an **error**, a **lack** of **results**, or a **slower response**.
If you detect this behaviour, you can **decrypt the encrypted data** and even **encrypt any cleartext**.
### How to exploit
You could use [https://github.com/AonCyberLabs/PadBuster](https://github.com/AonCyberLabs/PadBuster) to exploit this kind of vulnerability or just do
```text
sudo apt-get install padbuster
```
In order to test if the cookie of a site is vulnerable you could try:
**Encoding 0** means that **base64** is used \(but others are available, check the help menu\).
You could also **abuse** this **vulnerability** to **encrypt new data**. For example, imagine that the content of the cookie is "_user=MyUsername_", then you may change it to "_**user=administrator**_" and escalate privileges inside the application. You could also do it using `paduster`specifying the **-plaintext** parameter:
If the site is vulnerable `padbuster`will automatically try to find when the padding error occurs, but you can also indicating the error message it using the **-error** parameter.
In **summary**, you can start decrypting the encrypted data by **guessing** the correct **values** that can be used to **create** all the **different paddings**. Then, the padding oracle attack will start **decrypting** bytes **from** the **end** to the start by **guessing** which will be the correct **value** that **creates a padding of 1, 2, 3, etc**.
Imagine you have some encrypted text that occupies **2 blocks** formed by the bytes from **E0 to E15**.
In order to **decrypt** the **last****block** \(**E8** to **E15**\), the whole block passes through the "block cipher decryption" generating the **intermediary bytes I0 to I15**.
Finally, each intermediary byte is **XORed** with the previos encrypted bytes \(E0 to E7\). So:
This BF is as complex as the previous one as it's possible to calculate the the `E''15` whose value is 0x02: `E''7 = \x02 ^ I15` so it's just needed to find the **`E'14`** that generates a **`C14` equals to `0x02`**.
Then, do the same steps to decrypt C14: **`C14 = E6 ^ I14 = E6 ^ \x02 ^ E''6`**
Register and account and log in with this account .
If you **log in many times** and always get the **same cookie**, there is probably **something****wrong** in the application. The **cookie sent back should be unique** each time you log in. If the cookie is **always** the **same**, it will probably always be valid and there **won't be anyway to invalidate i**t.
Now, if you try to **modify** the **cookie**, you can see that you get an **error** from the application.
But if you BF the padding \(using padbuster for example\) you manage to get another cookie valid for a different user. This scenario is highly probably vulnerable to padbuster.