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author | ulfvonbelow <striness@tilde.club> | 2023-02-02 19:29:51 +0000 |
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committer | Dale Mellor <mcron-lsfnyl@rdmp.org> | 2023-03-18 14:00:26 +0000 |
commit | 2ff4d0f44ec21332d13de8d8ab8c39c77450ff7d (patch) | |
tree | 704f7fd354049ff3156947a55349f08ace7e844b /NEWS | |
parent | ec6a023c6634777da138f6237aab98b2f40ed4c2 (diff) | |
download | mcron-2ff4d0f44ec21332d13de8d8ab8c39c77450ff7d.tar.gz mcron-2ff4d0f44ec21332d13de8d8ab8c39c77450ff7d.tar.bz2 mcron-2ff4d0f44ec21332d13de8d8ab8c39c77450ff7d.zip |
crontab: split into crontab and setuid helper crontab-access.
If a user did somehow manage to install this crontab as functioning
setuid-root in its current state (despite linux ignoring the setuid bit when
executing scripts), it would be a very bad thing for them. It currently has
several glaring security holes. In approximate order from most to least
severe:
1. It blindly calls system() with the user-supplied value of VISUAL or
EDITOR, without dropping privileges. I can't fathom what the author was
thinking, considering (mcron scripts crontab) is littered with comments and
evidence that this is supposed to be a setuid-root program. An attacker
could simply run
EDITOR='sh #' crontab -e
and get a root shell. If you try this, you may find that it coincidentally
doesn't work because bash in particular always drops privileges on startup
if it detects differing real and effective ids. I don't know whether other
shells do this, but it actually doesn't matter as long as you're using
glibc, because its system() consults PATH looking for sh. One false entry
in there and an attacker is running arbitrary code as root. And crontab
doesn't do any sanitizing of *any* environment variables.
2. No attempt is made to sanitize any environment variables. Also, depending
on Guile's startup behavior, trying to sanitize them in guile may be too
late. A wrapper is needed, which would be needed anyway in order to use a
setuid script.
3. No attempt is made to ensure that the temporary file being edited is
newly-created, so an attacker could guess or deduce the filename to be
used, create it in advance, keep it open while crontab opens it, and
overwrite it right before it is copied, allowing them to execute arbitrary
code as any user that dared edit their crontab, including root.
4. Its replace mode accepts a filename. It does no validation whatsoever on
this, opens it, and copies it to the user's crontab as long as it's valid
vixie cron syntax. So for example,
crontab /var/cron/tabs/root && crontab --list
will let you freely read root's (and in a similar manner any other user's)
crontab. Vixie cron includes comments in its valid syntax, so any file that
consists entirely of comments can also be dumped. Also, any file for which
opening it and reading from it has side-effects can have those side-effects
triggered even if it isn't valid vixie cron syntax.
5. Crontabs created in /tmp for editing, as well as crontabs created in
/var/cron/tabs, are world-readable with typical inherited umask.
(1) and (4) are resolved by splitting crontab into two programs: crontab,
which is no longer setuid, and crontab-access, which is. The setuid program no
longer opens any files except for the user's crontab and the allow/deny files,
and it runs no external programs whatsoever. Crontab is run as the invoking
user, so the usual kernel-level permissions checks regarding which files can
be opened for reading apply. The editor is run from crontab, as the invoking
user, so sanitizing of the environment in the setuid helper has no effect on
the editor's environment.
(2) to be resolved shortly with a wrapper program.
(3) is resolved by using mkstemp. The inability to control the mode it is
created with, along with (5), are resolved by setting the umask properly.
* src/mcron/scripts/crontab-access.scm: new module.
* src/mcron/scripts/crontab.scm: move list, delete, and replace
implementation to crontab-access.
* src/crontab-access.in: new file to invoke main of crontab-access.
* Makefile.am: inform of crontab-access.in and crontab-access.scm.
Diffstat (limited to 'NEWS')
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