Name Sensitive Data Exposure in Veem Backup
Systems Affected Veeam Backup & Replication (B&R) v6, v6.5, v7, v8
Severity High 7.9/10
Impact CVSS:3.0/AV:L/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/
Vendor http://www.veeam.com/
Advisory http://www.ush.it/team/ush/
Authors Pasquale "sid" Fiorillo (sid AT ush DOT it)
Francesco "ascii" Ongaro (ascii AT ush DOT it)
Antonio "s4tan" Parata (s4tan AT ush DOT it)
Date 20151002
I. BACKGROUND
Veeam Software provides backup, disaster recovery and virtualization
management software for the VMware and Hyper-V environments. In 2012
Veeam gained more than 1200 employees worldwide, from 10 employees in
2008. It has more than 157'000 customers, 33'000 partners and 80 top
industry awards and claims to be the "#1 VM Backup" solution after it
gained traction against competitors like Backup Exec and Tivoli Storage
Manager.
Veeam Backup & Replication is the foundation of many Veeam products,
like Veeam Availability Suite and Veeam One.
ISGroup is an Italian Information Security boutique, we found this
0day issue while performing a Penetration Test for a customer, you
can discover more about ISGroup by visiting http://www.isgroup.biz/.
Responsible disclosure with Veeam: Veeam has no public security@ contact
and we worked with them through the ticket system opening a case using
one of our customer's assistance contract. We were unable to escape
from the sternness of this type of communication and move to PGP emails.
Their response anyway was pretty prompt, we spoke first with Denis
Bodnar and then escalate to Fred Bozhanov, Veeam Support Management. He
managed communication with the developers. We advise Veeam to give some
of their senior developers a "security team" mandate and to expose such
team to external, direct, communication. The people we spoke to did
their best and were extremely kind but they must be supported by a
corporate process.
Prior vulnerabilities in Veeam: It's very difficult to say if Veeam had
previous vulnerabilities, there are no CVE assigned to this vendor both
on Nist and to it's CPE (cpe:/:veeam). Information to customers of the
vulnerability is shown in the "other" section of the changelog: "Removed
weakly encrypted username and password logging from guest processing
components using networkless (VIX) guest interaction mode. Veeam thanks
Pasquale Fiorillo and Francesco Ongaro of ISGroup for vulnerability
discovery.".
The latest version of the software at the time of writing can be
obtained from:
http://www.veeam.com/kb2068
http://forums.veeam.com/veeam-
http://www.veeam.com/vmware-
II. DESCRIPTION
The vulnerability allows a local Windows user, even with low privileges
as the ones provided to an anonymous IIS's virtualhost user, to access
Veeam Backup logfiles that include a double-base64 encoded version of
the password used by Veeam to run.
The affected component is VeeamVixProxy, created by default on
installation and the user must be a privileged Local Administrator or
a Domain Administrator.
For example the wizard for adding a VMware or Hyper-V Backup Proxy
explicitly state "Type in an account with local administrator privileges
on the server you are adding. Use DOMAIN\USER format for domain
accounts, or HOST\USER for local accounts.".
We conservatively refer to this issue as a Local Administrator Privilege
Escalation but the use of Domain Administrator accounts is not
discouraged, if not advised, and we saw this pattern in our customer’s
production infrastructures.
TLDR: Anything able to read VeeamVixProxy logfiles, world readable by
default, can escalate to Local or Domain Administrator.
III. ANALYSIS
Veeam Backup & Replication (B&R) v6, v6.5, v7, v8 store VeeamVixProxy
logfiles in a directory accessible by Everyone and with permissions
that make them readable by Everyone (Everyone is, in the Microsoft
Windows terminology, the equivalent of the Unix’s nobody user).
Such logs, that are continuously generated, contain a Local or Domain
Administration user and password in an easily reversible (obfuscated)
format.
In versions of Veeam prior to 8 a bug prevented log rotation [3,4], on
older systems there could be a large amount of logs and thus an
extensive history of past and current Local or Domain Administrator
credentials.
A) Logfiles readable by Everyone
As shown in http://www.veeam.com/kb1789 the default log path is
Windows Server 2003: %allusersprofile%\Application Data\Veeam\Backup
Windows Server 2008 and up: %programdata%\Veeam\Backup
Our evidence is for Windows Server 2003, access to the needed files
are guaranteed to the Windows group "Everyone" so any local user, even
the ones used to map IIS sites, can access them.
This pose all the information contained in the logfiles at risk and
is a violation of the principle of least privilege.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
B) Double encoded password in Logfiles
The install/execution username and password is stored double-base64
encoded in Veeam Backup "VeeamVixProxy" logfiles.
Such files exists in "Veeam\Backup" with a name scheme as follows:
VeeamVixProxy_%dd%mm%yyyy.log
eg: VeeamVixProxy_16072015.log
The password is present in multiple points of the log-file and the
files are generated contentiously.
In this scenario, a Local File Read vulnerability could lead to full
system compromise given the fact that an attacker can re-use such
credentials by RDP or RPC (eg: psexec).
The log format leaking the credentials is:
<date> <time> <number> Blob Data: <base64>
eg: 01/07/2015 1.33.42 3936 Blob Data:
IwAAAAoAAABWAGUAZQBhAG0AVQBzAG
The "<base64>" of interest has the following format:
echo '
| base64 -d | hexdump -C
00000000 23 00 00 00 0a 00 00 00 56 00 65 00 65 00 61 00
|#.......V.e.e.a.|
00000010 6d 00 55 00 73 00 65 00 72 00 10 00 00 00 55 00
|m.U.s.e.r.....U.|
00000020 32 00 56 00 6a 00 63 00 6d 00 56 00 30 00
|2.V.j.c.m.V.0. |
First byte is \x23 (#), followed by a NULL and a newline (\x0a),
followed by a NULL. Next bytes specify the username, followed by
a DLE (data link escape) and a NULL. Everything in the first base64
container is in UTF16.
echo -n "isgroup" | iconv -t UTF-16LE | hexdump -C
What follows is the most interesting part, a base64 representation of
the password.
echo -en "U2VjcmV0" | base64 -d
Secret
Since the VeeamVixProxy files are continuously written the leak will
occur even if administrators delete them. An official fix from Veeam
is needed in order to fully resolve the vulnerability.
This vulnerability is especially dangerous when the "VeeamAdmin"
(or whenever you called it) is also a Domain Administration user.
IV. WORKAROUND
Update: on 8 October 2015 Veeam B&R 8.0 Update 3 has been released and
the vendor states it fixes the vulnerability. You are strongly advised
to update to the latest version. We did not investigate but will update
you on ush.it if needed.
Follow this steps to mitigate the issue meanwhile an official patch
is released:
If you are on Windows 2003 environment fix the permission on
"%alluserprofile%\Application Data\Veeam\Backup" path so that only
"Administrators" group can read it.
If you are on Windows 2008 environment fix the permission on
"%programdata%\Veeam\Backup\" so that only "Administrators" group can
read it.
Create a scheduled task to delete this logfiles from disk.
VI. VENDOR RESPONSE
Vendor released Update 3 of Veeam B&R 8.0 that contains the proper
security patch. At the time of this writing an official patch is
currently available.
VII. CVE INFORMATION
Mitre assigned the CVE-2015-5742 for this vulnerability, internally to
Veeam it's referred as Case #00984117.
VIII. DISCLOSURE TIMELINE
20150723 Bug discovered
20150724 Vulnerability disclosed to ISGroup's Partners
20150805 Request for CVE to Mitre
20150805 Got CVE-2015-5742 from cve-assign (fast!)
20150806 Details disclosure to Support/Denis Bodnar and CVE
20150806 Escalation to Fred Bozhanov (fast!) will fix in Veeam B&R v8
20150818 Veeam closes the ticket
20150923 ISGroup asks for updates, no release date from vendor
20150923 We extend the disclosure date as 30 Sept will not be met
20151008 Veeam releases Update 3 for Version 8.0
20151008 Advisory disclosed to the public
IX. REFERENCES
[1] Top 10 2013-A6-Sensitive Data Exposure
https://www.owasp.org/index.
[2] Access Control Cheat Sheet
https://www.owasp.org/index.
[3] http://forums.veeam.com/veeam-
proxy-log-t20579.html
User reporting 5.5 GB of VeeamVixProxy_date.log files
[4] http://forums.veeam.com/veeam-
uest-t28404.html
User reporting 7 GB of VeeamVixProxy logs on 7.0.0.839
[4] http://www.veeam.com/kb1825
How to Change the settings related to Veeam Backup &
Replication Log Files
[5] http://www.veeam.com/kb1789
How to locate and collect VSS/VIX log files from Guest OS
Want to access this document in HTML?
http://www.ush.it/2015/10/08/
X. CREDIT
Pasquale "sid" Fiorillo, Francesco "ascii" Ongaro and Antonio "s4tan"
Parata are credited with the discovery of this vulnerability.
Pasquale "sid" Fiorillo
web site: http://www.ush.it/
mail: sid AT ush DOT it
Francesco "ascii" Ongaro
web site: http://www.ush.it/
mail: ascii AT ush DOT it
Antonio "s4tan" Parata
web site: http://www.ush.it/
mail: s4tan AT ush DOT it
XI. LEGAL NOTICES
Copyright (c) 2015 Francesco "ascii" Ongaro
Permission is granted for the redistribution of this alert
electronically. It may not be edited in any way without mine express
written consent. If you wish to reprint the whole or any
part of this alert in any other medium other than electronically,
please email me for permission.
Disclaimer: The information in the advisory is believed to be accurate
at the time of publishing based on currently available information. Use
of the information constitutes acceptance for use in an AS IS condition.
There are no warranties with regard to this information. Neither the
author nor the publisher accepts any liability for any direct, indirect,
or consequential loss or damage arising from use of, or reliance on,
this information.
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