NTLM HTTP Authentication is insecure by design - a new writeup by Amit Klein

From: Amit Klein (AKsecurity) (aksecurity_at_hotpop.com)
Date: 07/18/05

  • Next message: Luigi Auriemma: "Broadcast format string and buffer-overflow in Race Driver 1.20"
    Date: Mon, 18 Jul 2005 19:40:32 +0200
    To: bugTraq <bugtraq@securityfocus.com>
    
    

                         NTLM HTTP Authentication
                  (and possibly other connection-oriented
              HTTP authentication and authorization protocols)
                          is insecure by design

                                    Or

                   NTLM Authentication and HTTP proxies
                                 don't mix

                           Amit Klein, July 2005

    Introduction
    ============

    In "Meanwhile on the other side of the webserver"
    (http://www.securityfocus.com/archive/1/401866) I surveyed some
    possible attacks against a scenario wherein a proxy server is
    positioned in front of a web server, and that proxy server shares a
    single TCP connection to the server among several clients. In that
    write-up, I mentioned several problems related to HTTP Request
    Smuggling
    (http://www.watchfire.com/resources/HTTP-Request-Smuggling.pdf) and
    HTTP Response Splitting
    (http://www.sanctuminc.com/pdf/WhitePaper_HTTPResponse.pdf). These
    are attacks that make use of non-RFC HTTP requests (HTTP Request
    Smuggling) or inject unexpected data (CRLF) through the application
    into the HTTP response stream (HTTP Response Splitting). In contrast,
    this write-up discusses a completely different problem, one which is
    inherent to the situation of a connection-oriented authentication/
    authorization protocol (e.g. NTLM authentication) used with a proxy
    server that shares TCP connections among several clients. Exploiting
    this vulnerability can be performed with 100% RFC compliant HTTP
    requests, and without attacking the application (i.e. without sending
    malicious data to the application).

    Theory
    ======

    In connection oriented security, the authentication is associated
    with the TCP connection, rather than to the individual HTTP requests
    it transports. As a result, a proxy server that shares a TCP
    connection to the server among 2 clients may jeopardize the security
    of the web application by sending a first request (or a set of
    requests) with authentication/authorization credentials from the
    first client, followed by a request with no credentials from the
    second client, and have the web server associate the privileges of
    the first request with the second request.

    NTLM authentication is an example to such connection-oriented
    security scheme.
    From http://curl.haxx.se/rfc/ntlm.html#ntlmHttpAuthentication
    (lacking official Microsoft specification, this resource is one of
    the most comprehensive descriptions of NTLM authentication):

      This [HTTP NTLM authentication] scheme differs from most "normal"
      HTTP authentication mechanisms, in that subsequent requests over
      the authenticated connection are not themselves authenticated;
      NTLM is connection-oriented, rather than request-oriented. So a
      second request for "/index.html" would not carry any
      authentication information, and the server would request none.

    This attack is possible because:

    1. Proxy servers share the same TCP connection to the server, among
    several clients. This enables several attacks (on top of the one
    described here), as discussed in "Meanwhile, on the other side of
    the web server".

    2. Connection-oriented security is an insecure concept because
    there's no guarantee in the HTTP RFC that a single connection will
    be used by a single entity. As can be seen, this simply doesn't
    hold. Note that SSL is not connection-oriented security since each
    request is encrypted with a secret, shared key, making this protocol
    implicitly request-oriented.

    Results
    =======

    I tested this security issue with Microsoft IIS/6.0 (as the web
    server that requires NTLM authentication – "Integrated Windows
    Authentication" in Microsoft's IIS GUI terminology) and Sun
    Microsystems Sun Java System Web Proxy 4 (as the proxy server that
    shares TCP connections to the same server).

    There are some tricky points in making this attack work:

    1. Microsoft IE 6.0 refuses to conduct NTLM authentication when it
    is configured to use a forward proxy. Therefore, the setup used was
    with the Sun Proxy as a reverse proxy.

    2. Microsoft IIS/6.0 does not induce the authentication level of a
    request to the whole connection, if the HTTP request contains the
    Via header. The Sun Proxy server sends this header by default (is
    there a way to turn this off?), and so, in order to strip it off, an
    Apache 2.0.54 reverse proxy server (with ProxyVia Block directive)
    was introduced between the Sun Proxy server and the IIS server.

    After these tweaks, both IE 6.0 and Mozilla 1.4 were used to
    demonstrate the attack:

    In the first step, a browser was used to authenticate to the IIS/6.0
    (through the Sun Proxy and the Apache proxy). The authentication was
    done in NTLM. Since the Apache proxy removed the Via header, the
    IIS/6.0 induced the authentication credentials on the whole TCP
    connection.

    In the second step, a different client was used to access a
    restricted resource on the IIS/6.0 through the Sun proxy (and the
    Apache proxy). The Sun Proxy used the same TCP connection to the
    Apache as it used for the first request, and likewise, the Apache
    used the same connection to the IIS/6.0 as it used for the first
    request, and therefore the credentials of the first request were
    successfully induced onto the second request, although it arrived
    from a different client on a different TCP connection (from the
    client to the Sun Proxy).

    Scope of the attack
    ===================

    *) Not all proxy servers honor NTLM authentication. Squid, for one,
    deliberately doesn't support NTLM
    (http://www.squid-cache.org/Doc/FAQ/FAQ-11.html#ss11.14). Indeed,
    Squid seems to strip off the WWW-Authenticate header if it contains
    NTLM or Negotiate, thereby effectively disabling NTLM authentication
    between the client and the web server. But as mentioned above, there
    are some proxy servers that do support NTLM authentication, such as
    Sun Proxy 4.

    *) Not all proxy servers share TCP connection to the server. Many
    do,some don't (e.g. Apache 2.0 mod_proxy).

    *) If IE is to be tricked, then it mustn't be configured with a
    forward proxy server. That means that the attack is effective for IE
    (only) with transparent proxy servers (such as ones used by many
    ISPs), and reverse proxy servers (as demonstrated above). The
    Mozilla browser has no such inhibitions, and therefore, a Mozilla
    shop (e.g. some universities and open source organizations) may be
    more vulnerable.

    *) The web server (IIS/6.0) must receive a Via-less request. The
    Microsoft implementation assumes that the Via header is always sent
    by a proxy server, and this is indeed mandated by the HTTP/1.1 RFC
    2616 (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt), section 14.45:
      The Via general-header field MUST be used by gateways and proxies
      to indicate the intermediate protocols and recipients between the
      user agent and the server on requests [...]
    However, it seems that not all servers adhere to this standard. For
    example, Apache 2.0.54 mod_proxy does not generate a Via header by
    default (see the ProxyVia directive -
    http://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.0/mod/mod_proxy.html#proxyvia, yet
    the default httpd.conf file contains a commented-out "ProxyVia On"
    directive, so it's possible that many Apache proxy deployments do
    send the Via header). That isn't to say that Apache 2.0.54 mod_proxy
    facilitates this attack – as mentioned above, it does not, because
    it does not share the connection to the server among several clients.
    Anyway, there are many "anonymous" proxy servers in the Internet,
    which deliberately do not send the Via header, ironically with the
    intention to increase the privacy of their users. And there are many
    other devices and configurations that may remove the Via header if
    it exists (in the above example, I introduced the Apache proxy
    server to do just that).

    *) Last but not least - NTLM authentication should be used, and over
    HTTP (not over HTTPS). This is the default configuration of
    Microsoft Outlook Web Access 2000/2003.

    Recommendations
    ===============

    *) Proxy vendors – do not to share TCP connections to the server
    among several clients. Yes, it improves performance, but it's also
    insecure and enables/aids 3 different attacks (the one described
    here, HTTP Request Smuggling and HTTP Response Splitting).
    Also, comply to the RFC and send the HTTP Via request header by
    default (Apache Group - please take note).

    *) Designers of protocols past, present and future – do not rely on
    TCP connection being used by a single logical entity. As a special
    case, NTLM should be withdrawn or redesigned (OK, this won't
    happen...). Also, do not rely on the Via header (or any other
    header) to indicate that the client is a proxy server. Design the
    protocol such that it will be indifferent to whether the client is a
    proxy server or a browser.

    *) Site owners – abandon NTLM authentication in favor of other
    authentication/authorization options (e.g. HTTP digest
    authentication – see RFC 2617 –
    http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2617.txt).
    Alternatively, use NTLM over HTTPS (SSL) to avoid this
    vulnerability, but make sure that the SSL is terminated on the web
    server, not some SSL accelerator (which may in itself facilitate the
    attack, e.g. if it shares a TCP connection to the server among
    several clients).
    Another alternative is to configure the web server not to use
    persistent HTTP connections for resources that are protected by NTLM
    autnehtication.

    *) Proxy owners – in order to protect your clients and your clients'
    privacy: do not turn off generating the "Via" HTTP request header by
    the proxy server. True, it indicates that the request comes from a
    proxy server, but in the case of NTLM authentication, it increases
    the likelihood of the client not to be subject to the attack
    described here. If possible, turn off TCP connection sharing in your
    proxy server. If none of this is possible, consider actively
    disrupting NTLM authentication, in order to force your clients to
    use other (hopefully more secure) authentication methods.

    A note about detection/prevention
    =================================

    Since the attacker's request is practically identical to the request
    sent by the authenticated user, it's quite a problem for an external
    product (such as IDS/IPS/WAF) to detect this attack.

    Of course, if the IDS/IPS/WAF is between the web-server and the proxy,
    it stands very little chance to detect that something's wrong, since
    the attacker's request is practically identical to the valid user's
    requests. However, it can block the attack simply by (gracefully, if
    possible) closing the TCP connection after a successful response (i.e.
    not 401) for a request containing NTLM authentication.

    If the proxy server is on site, and the IDS/IPS/WAF is in front
    of it, then protection becomes harder – the IDS/IPS/WAF would have to
    replace the NTLM authentication of the server with its own, and
    practically replicate the logic from the web-server to itself, in
    order to ensure that a request without credentials is made only to a
    resource which is public.

    It's also not too trivial to automatically scan for this kind of
    vulnerability. A scanner would have to be positioned in front of the
    proxy server (which may be away from the site), and would have to
    simulate the attack using two TCP connections.

    A note about basic authentication in IIS/5.0
    ============================================

    If memory serves, and peculiarly enough, awhile ago Ronen Heled,
    Chaim Linhart and me bumped into an implementation quirk of IIS/5.0
    wherein HTTP basic authentication seems to be also connection
    oriented, that is, if the TCP connection had already transmitted an
    HTTP request with valid Authorization header, the credentials are
    used for the next requests (on this TCP connection) even if these do
    not contain the Authorization header. Here too, the presence of the
    Via HTTP request header turns off the connection-orientedness.
    Again – this is something we noted awhile ago as a byproduct of a
    research in a different direction, and since I have no solid
    evidence, I am reluctant to point at it as a vulnerability. If
    someone can verify this on IIS/5.0 (I didn't manage to replicate it
    on IIS/6.0), please step foreward...


  • Next message: Luigi Auriemma: "Broadcast format string and buffer-overflow in Race Driver 1.20"

    Relevant Pages