hacktricks/pentesting-web/oauth-to-account-takeover.md
2021-11-28 13:39:42 +00:00

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OAuth to Account takeover

Basic Information

There are a couple different versions of OAuth, you can read https://oauth.net/2/ to get a baseline understanding.

In this article, we will be focusing on the most common flow that you will come across today, which is the OAuth 2.0 authorization code grant type. In essence, OAuth provides developers an authorization mechanism to allow an application to access data or perform certain actions against your account, from another application (the authorization server).

For example, lets say website https://yourtweetreader.com has functionality to display all tweets youve ever sent, including private tweets. In order to do this, OAuth 2.0 is introduced. https://yourtweetreader.com will ask you to authorize their Twitter application to access all your Tweets. A consent page will pop up on https://twitter.com displaying what permissions are being requested, and who the developer requesting it is. Once you authorize the request, https://yourtweetreader.com will be able to access to your Tweets on behalf of you.

Elements which are important to understand in an OAuth 2.0 context:

  • resource owner: The resource owner is the user/entity granting access to their protected resource, such as their Twitter account Tweets. In this example, this would be you.
  • resource server: The resource server is the server handling authenticated requests after the application has obtained an access token on behalf of the resource owner . In this example, this would be https://twitter.com
  • client application: The client application is the application requesting authorization from the resource owner. In this example, this would be https://yourtweetreader.com.
  • authorization server: The authorization server is the server issuing access tokens to the client application after successfully authenticating the resource owner and obtaining authorization. In the above example, this would be https://twitter.com
  • client_id: The client_id is the identifier for the application. This is a public, **non-secret **unique identifier.
  • **client_secret: **The client_secret is a secret known only to the application and the authorization server. This is used to generate access_tokens
  • response_type: The response_type is a value to detail which type of token is being requested, such as code
  • scope: The scope is the requested level of access the client application is requesting from the resource owner
  • redirect_uri: The redirect_uri is the URL the user is redirected to after the authorization is complete. This usually must match the redirect URL that you have previously registered with the service
  • state: The state parameter can persist data between the user being directed to the authorization server and back again. Its important that this is a unique value as it serves as a CSRF protection mechanism if it contains a unique or random value per request
  • grant_type: The grant_type parameter explains what the grant type is, and which token is going to be returned
  • code: This code is the authorization code received from the authorization server which will be in the query string parameter “code” in this request. This code is used in conjunction with the client_id and client_secret by the client application to fetch an access_token
  • access_token: The access_token is the token that the client application uses to make API requests on behalf of a resource owner
  • refresh_token: The refresh_token allows an application to obtain a new access_token without prompting the user

Real Example

Putting this all together, here is what a real OAuth flow looks like:

  1. You visit https://yourtweetreader.com and click the “Integrate with Twitter” button.
  2. https://yourtweetreader.com sends a request to https://twitter.com asking you, the resource owner, to authorize https://yourtweetreader.coms Twitter application to access your Tweets. The request will look like:
https://twitter.com/auth
 ?response_type=code
 &client_id=yourtweetreader_clientId
 &redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fyourtweetreader.com%2Fcallback
 &scope=readTweets
 &state=kasodk9d1jd992k9klaskdh123

3. You will be prompted with a consent page:

4. Once accepted, Twitter will send a request back to the redirect_uri with the code and state parameters:

https://yourtweetreader.com?code=asd91j3jd91j92j1j9d1&state=kasodk9d1jd992k9klaskdh123

5. https://yourtweetreader.com will then take that code , and using their applications client_id and client_secret , will make a request from the server to retrieve an access_token on behalf of you, which will allow them to access the permissions you consented to:

POST /oauth/access_token
Host: twitter.com
...{"client_id": "yourtweetreader_clientId", "client_secret": "yourtweetreader_clientSecret", "code": "asd91j3jd91j92j1j9d1", "grant_type": "authorization_code"}

6. Finally, the flow is complete and https://yourtweetreader.com will make an API call to Twitter with your access_token to access your Tweets.

Bug Bounty Findings

Now, the interesting part! There are many things that can go wrong in an OAuth implementation, here are the different categories of bugs I frequently see:

Weak redirect_uri configuration

. The redirect_uri is very important because **sensitive data, such as the code is appended to this URL **after authorization. If the redirect_uri can be redirected to an attacker controlled server, this means the attacker can potentially takeover a victims account by using the code themselves, and gaining access to the victims data.

The way this is going to be exploited is going to vary by authorization server. Some will only accept the exact same** redirect_uri path as specified in the client application**, but some will accept anything in the same domain or subdirectory of the redirect_uri .

Depending on the logic handled by the server, there are a number of techniques to bypass a redirect_uri . In a situation where a redirect_uri is https://yourtweetreader.com/callback, these include:

  • Open redirects: https://yourtweetreader.com/callback?redirectUrl=https://evil.com
  • Path traversal: https://yourtweetreader.com/callback/../redirect?url=https://evil.com
  • Weak redirect_uri regexes: https://yourtweetreader.com.evil.com
  • HTML Injection and stealing tokens via referer header: https://yourtweetreader.com/callback/home/attackerimg.jpg

**Other parameters **that can be vulnerable to Open Redirects are:

  • client_uri - URL of the home page of the client application
  • policy_uri - URL that the Relying Party client application provides so that the end user can read about how their profile data will be used.
  • tos_uri - URL that the Relying Party client provides so that the end user can read about the Relying Party's terms of service.
  • initiate_login_uri - URI using the https scheme that a third party can use to initiate a login by the RP. Also should be used for client-side redirection.

All these parameters are **optional according to the OAuth and OpenID **specifications and not always supported on a particular server, so it's always worth identifying which parameters are supported on your server.

If you target an OpenID server, the discovery endpoint at **.well-known/openid-configuration**sometimes contains parameters such as "registration_endpoint", "request_uri_parameter_supported", and "require_request_uri_registration". These can help you to find the registration endpoint and other server configuration values.

CSRF - Improper handling of state parameter

Very often, the state parameter is completely omitted or used in the wrong way. If a state parameter is nonexistent, or a static value that never changes, the OAuth flow will very likely be vulnerable to CSRF. Sometimes, even if there is a state parameter, the application might not do any validation of the parameter and an attack will work. The way to exploit this would be to go through the authorization process on your own account, and pause right after authorising. You will then come across a request such as:

https://yourtweetreader.com?code=asd91j3jd91j92j1j9d1

After you receive this request, you can then drop the request because these codes are typically one-time use. You can then send this URL to a** logged-in user, and it will add your account to their account**. At first, this might not sound very sensitive since you are simply adding your account to a victims account. However, many OAuth implementations are for sign-in purposes, so if you can add your Google account which is used for logging in, you could potentially perform an **Account Takeover **with a single click as logging in with your Google account would give you access to the victims account.

You can find an example about this in this CTF writeup and in the HTB box called Oouch.

Ive also seen the state parameter used as an additional redirect value several times. The application will use redirect_uri for the initial redirect, but then the state parameter as a second redirect which could contain the code within the query parameters, or referer header.

One important thing to note is this doesnt just apply to logging in and account takeover type situations. Ive seen misconfigurations in:

  • Slack integrations allowing an attacker to add their Slack account as the recipient of all notifications/messages
  • Stripe integrations allowing an attacker to overwrite payment info and accept payments from the victims customers
  • PayPal integrations allowing an attacker to add their PayPal account to the victims account, which would deposit money to the attackers PayPal

Pre Account Takeover

One of the other more common issues I see is when applications allow “Sign in with X” but also username/password. There are 2 different ways to attack this:

  1. If the application does not require email verification on account creation, try creating an account with a victims email address and attacker password before the victim has registered. If the victim then tries to register or sign in with a third party, such as Google, its possible the application will do a lookup, see that email is already registered, then link their Google account to the attacker created account. This is a “pre account takeover” where an attacker will have access to the victims account if they created it prior to the victim registering.
  2. If an OAuth app does not require email verification, try signing up with that OAuth app with a victims email address. The same issue as above could exist, but youd be attacking it from the other direction and getting access to the victims account for an account takeover.

Disclosure of Secrets

Its very important to recognize which of the many OAuth parameters are secret, and to protect those. For example, leaking the client_id is perfectly fine and necessary, but leaking the client_secret is dangerous. If this is leaked, the attacker can potentially abuse the trust and identity of the trusted client application to steal user access_tokens and private information/access for their integrated accounts. Going back to our earlier example, one issue Ive seen is performing this step from the client, instead of the server:

5. https://yourtweetreader.com will then take that code , and using their applications client_id and client_secret , will make a request from the server to retrieve an access_token on behalf of you, which will allow them to access the permissions you consented to.

If this is done from the client, the client_secret will be leaked and users will be able to generate access_tokens on behalf of the application. With some social engineering, they can also add more scopes to the OAuth authorization and it will all appear legitimate as the request will come from the trusted client application.

Client Secret Bruteforce

You can try to **bruteforce the client_secret **of a service provider with the identity provider in order to be try to steal accounts.
The request to BF may look similar to:

POST /token HTTP/1.1
content-type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
host: 10.10.10.10:3000
content-length: 135
Connection: close

code=77515&redirect_uri=http%3A%2F%2F10.10.10.10%3A3000%2Fcallback&grant_type=authorization_code&client_id=public_client_id&client_secret=[bruteforce]

Referer Header leaking Code + State

Once the client has the code and state, if it's reflected inside the Referer header when he browses to a different page, then it's vulnerable.

Access Token Stored in Browser History

Go to the browser history and check if the access token is saved in there.

Everlasting Authorization Code

The authorization code should live just for some time to limit the time window where an attacker can steal and use it.

Authorization/Refresh Token not bound to client

If you can get the authorization code and use it with a different client then you can takeover other accounts.

SSRFs parameters

One of the hidden URLs that you may miss is the Dynamic Client Registration endpoint. In order to successfully authenticate users, OAuth servers need to know details about the client application, such as the "client_name", "client_secret", "redirect_uris", and so on. These details can be provided via local configuration, but OAuth authorization servers may also have a special registration endpoint. This endpoint is normally mapped to "/register" and accepts POST requests with the following format:

POST /connect/register HTTP/1.1
Content-Type: application/json
Host: server.example.com
Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiJ9.eyJ ...

{
 "application_type": "web",
 "redirect_uris": ["https://client.example.org/callback"],
 "client_name": "My Example",
 "logo_uri": "https://client.example.org/logo.png",
 "subject_type": "pairwise",
 "sector_identifier_uri": "https://example.org/rdrct_uris.json",
 "token_endpoint_auth_method": "client_secret_basic",
 "jwks_uri": "https://client.example.org/public_keys.jwks",
 "contacts": ["ve7jtb@example.org"],
 "request_uris": ["https://client.example.org/rf.txt"]
}

There are two specifications that define parameters in this request: RFC7591 for OAuth and Openid Connect Registration 1.0.

As you can see here, a number of these values are passed in via URL references and look like potential targets for Server Side Request Forgery. At the same time, most servers we've tested do not resolve these URLs immediately when they receive a registration request. Instead, they just save these parameters and use them later during the OAuth authorization flow. In other words, this is more like a second-order SSRF, which makes black-box detection harder.

The following parameters are particularly interesting for SSRF attacks:

  • logo_uri - URL that references a logo for the client application. After you register a client, you can try to call the OAuth authorization endpoint ("/authorize") using your new "client_id". After the login, the server will ask you to approve the request and may display the image from the "logo_uri". If the server fetches the image by itself, the SSRF should be triggered by this step. Alternatively, the server may just include the logo via a client-side "<img>" tag. Although this doesn't lead to SSRF, it may lead to XSS if the URL is not escaped.

  • jwks_uri - URL for the client's JSON Web Key Set [JWK] document. This key set is needed on the server for validating signed requests made to the token endpoint when using JWTs for client authentication [RFC7523]. In order to test for SSRF in this parameter, register a new client application with a malicious "jwks_uri", perform the authorization process to obtain an authorization code for any user, and then fetch the "/token" endpoint with the following body:

    POST /oauth/token HTTP/1.1
    ...
    ``
    grant_type=authorization_code&code=n0esc3NRze7LTCu7iYzS6a5acc3f0ogp4&client_assertion_type=urn:ietf:params:oauth:client-assertion-type:jwt-bearer&client_assertion=eyJhbGci...

    If vulnerable, the server should perform a server-to-server HTTP request to the supplied "jwks_uri" because it needs this key to check the validity of the "client_assertion" parameter in your request. This will probably only be a blind SSRF vulnerability though, as the server expects a proper JSON response.

  • sector_identifier_uri - This URL references a file with a single JSON array of redirect_uri values. If supported, the server may fetch this value as soon as you submit the dynamic registration request. If this is not fetched immediately, try to perform authorization for this client on the server. As it needs to know the redirect_uris in order to complete the authorization flow, this will force the server to make a request to your malicious sector_identifier_uri.

  • request_uris - An array of the allowed request_uris for this client. The "request_uri" parameter may be supported on the authorization endpoint to provide a URL that contains a JWT with the request information (see https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html#rfc.section.6.2).

    Even if dynamic client registration is not enabled, or it requires authentication, we can try to perform SSRF on the authorization endpoint simply by using "request_uri":\

    GET /authorize?response_type=code%20id_token&client_id=sclient1&request_uri=https://ybd1rc7ylpbqzygoahtjh6v0frlh96.burpcollaborator.net/request.jwt

    Note: do not confuse this parameter with "redirect_uri". The "redirect_uri" is used for redirection after authorization, whereas "request_uri" is fetched by the server at the start of the authorization process.

    At the same time, many servers we've seen do not allow arbitrary "request_uri" values: they only allow whitelisted URLs that were pre-registered during the client registration process. That's why we need to supply "request_uris": "https://ybd1rc7ylpbqzygoahtjh6v0frlh96.burpcollaborator.net/request.jwt" beforehand.

OAuth providers Race Conditions

If the platform you are testing is an OAuth provider** **read this to test for possible Race Conditions.

References