CVE-2021-21348 - Uncontrolled Resource Consumption

Severity

75%

Complexity

39%

Confidentiality

60%

XStream is a Java library to serialize objects to XML and back again. In XStream before version 1.4.16, there is a vulnerability which may allow a remote attacker to occupy a thread that consumes maximum CPU time and will never return. No user is affected, who followed the recommendation to setup XStream's security framework with a whitelist limited to the minimal required types. If you rely on XStream's default blacklist of the Security Framework, you will have to use at least version 1.4.16.

CVSS 3.1 Base Score 7.5. CVSS Attack Vector: network. CVSS Attack Complexity: low. CVSS Vector: (CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H).

CVSS 2.0 Base Score 7.8. CVSS Attack Vector: network. CVSS Attack Complexity: low. CVSS Vector: (AV:N/AC:L/Au:N/C:N/I:N/A:C).

Demo Examples

Uncontrolled Resource Consumption

CWE-400

The following example demonstrates the weakness.


               
}
}
}
...
Thread.currentThread().interrupt();// postpone response
...
new Thread(loop).start();
}
}
}
r.run();
...

There are no limits to runnables. Potentially an attacker could cause resource problems very quickly.

Uncontrolled Resource Consumption

CWE-400

This code allocates a socket and forks each time it receives a new connection.


               
}
pid = fork();

The program does not track how many connections have been made, and it does not limit the number of connections. Because forking is a relatively expensive operation, an attacker would be able to cause the system to run out of CPU, processes, or memory by making a large number of connections. Alternatively, an attacker could consume all available connections, preventing others from accessing the system remotely.

Uncontrolled Resource Consumption

CWE-400

In the following example a server socket connection is used to accept a request to store data on the local file system using a specified filename. The method openSocketConnection establishes a server socket to accept requests from a client. When a client establishes a connection to this service the getNextMessage method is first used to retrieve from the socket the name of the file to store the data, the openFileToWrite method will validate the filename and open a file to write to on the local file system. The getNextMessage is then used within a while loop to continuously read data from the socket and output the data to the file until there is no longer any data from the socket.


               
}
closeSocket(socket);
return(FAIL);
closeFile();
}
break;

This example creates a situation where data can be dumped to a file on the local file system without any limits on the size of the file. This could potentially exhaust file or disk resources and/or limit other clients' ability to access the service.

Uncontrolled Resource Consumption

CWE-400

In the following example, the processMessage method receives a two dimensional character array containing the message to be processed. The two-dimensional character array contains the length of the message in the first character array and the message body in the second character array. The getMessageLength method retrieves the integer value of the length from the first character array. After validating that the message length is greater than zero, the body character array pointer points to the start of the second character array of the two-dimensional character array and memory is allocated for the new body character array.


               
}/* process message accepts a two-dimensional character array of the form [length][body] containing the message to be processed */
}
return(SUCCESS);
return(FAIL);

This example creates a situation where the length of the body character array can be very large and will consume excessive memory, exhausting system resources. This can be avoided by restricting the length of the second character array with a maximum length check

Also, consider changing the type from 'int' to 'unsigned int', so that you are always guaranteed that the number is positive. This might not be possible if the protocol specifically requires allowing negative values, or if you cannot control the return value from getMessageLength(), but it could simplify the check to ensure the input is positive, and eliminate other errors such as signed-to-unsigned conversion errors (CWE-195) that may occur elsewhere in the code.


               
if ((length > 0) && (length < MAX_LENGTH)) {...}

Uncontrolled Resource Consumption

CWE-400

In the following example, a server object creates a server socket and accepts client connections to the socket. For every client connection to the socket a separate thread object is generated using the ClientSocketThread class that handles request made by the client through the socket.


               
}
} catch (IOException ex) {...}
serverSocket.close();
t.start();

In this example there is no limit to the number of client connections and client threads that are created. Allowing an unlimited number of client connections and threads could potentially overwhelm the system and system resources.

The server should limit the number of client connections and the client threads that are created. This can be easily done by creating a thread pool object that limits the number of threads that are generated.


               
}
} catch (IOException ex) {...}
serverSocket.close();
pool.execute(t);

Demo Examples

Deserialization of Untrusted Data

CWE-502

This code snippet deserializes an object from a file and uses it as a UI button:


               
}
in.close();

This code does not attempt to verify the source or contents of the file before deserializing it. An attacker may be able to replace the intended file with a file that contains arbitrary malicious code which will be executed when the button is pressed.

To mitigate this, explicitly define final readObject() to prevent deserialization. An example of this is:


               
throw new java.io.IOException("Cannot be deserialized"); }

Deserialization of Untrusted Data

CWE-502

In Python, the Pickle library handles the serialization and deserialization processes. In this example derived from [R.502.7], the code receives and parses data, and afterwards tries to authenticate a user based on validating a token.


               
}
raise AuthFail

Unfortunately, the code does not verify that the incoming data is legitimate. An attacker can construct a illegitimate, serialized object "AuthToken" that instantiates one of Python's subprocesses to execute arbitrary commands. For instance,the attacker could construct a pickle that leverages Python's subprocess module, which spawns new processes and includes a number of arguments for various uses. Since Pickle allows objects to define the process for how they should be unpickled, the attacker can direct the unpickle process to call Popen in the subprocess module and execute /bin/sh.

Overview

First reported 3 years ago

2021-03-23 00:15:00

Last updated 3 years ago

2021-11-30 22:09:00

Affected Software

Debian Linux 9.0

9.0

Oracle Communications Policy Management 12.5.0

12.5.0

Oracle Communications Unified Inventory Management 7.3.2

7.3.2

Oracle Communications Unified Inventory Management 7.3.4

7.3.4

Oracle Communications Unified Inventory Management 7.3.5

7.3.5

Oracle Communications Unified Inventory Management 7.4.0

7.4.0

Oracle WebCenter Portal 11.1.1.9.0

11.1.1.9.0

Oracle WebCenter Portal 12.2.1.3.0

12.2.1.3.0

References

http://x-stream.github.io/changes.html#1.4.16

https://github.com/x-stream/xstream/security/advisories/GHSA-56p8-3fh9-4cvq

https://x-stream.github.io/CVE-2021-21348.html

https://x-stream.github.io/security.html#workaround

http://x-stream.github.io/changes.html#1.4.16

Release Notes, Third Party Advisory

https://github.com/x-stream/xstream/security/advisories/GHSA-56p8-3fh9-4cvq

Third Party Advisory

https://x-stream.github.io/CVE-2021-21348.html

Third Party Advisory

https://x-stream.github.io/security.html#workaround

Mitigation, Third Party Advisory

[debian-lts-announce] 20210403 [SECURITY] [DLA 2616-1] libxstream-java security update

[jmeter-dev] 20210406 [GitHub] [jmeter] sseide opened a new pull request #655: update x-stream to 1.4.16 (from 1.4.15)

[debian-lts-announce] 20210403 [SECURITY] [DLA 2616-1] libxstream-java security update

Mailing List, Third Party Advisory

[jmeter-dev] 20210406 [GitHub] [jmeter] sseide opened a new pull request #655: update x-stream to 1.4.16 (from 1.4.15)

Mailing List, Third Party Advisory

[activemq-users] 20210427 Release date for ActiveMQ v5.16.2 to fix CVEs

Mailing List, Third Party Advisory

https://security.netapp.com/advisory/ntap-20210430-0002/

https://security.netapp.com/advisory/ntap-20210430-0002/

Third Party Advisory

N/A

FEDORA-2021-fbad11014a

FEDORA-2021-d894ca87dc

https://www.oracle.com/security-alerts/cpuoct2021.html

FEDORA-2021-5e376c0ed9

DSA-5004

N/A

Third Party Advisory

FEDORA-2021-fbad11014a

Mailing List, Third Party Advisory

FEDORA-2021-d894ca87dc

Mailing List, Third Party Advisory

https://www.oracle.com/security-alerts/cpuoct2021.html

Third Party Advisory

FEDORA-2021-5e376c0ed9

Mailing List, Third Party Advisory

DSA-5004

Third Party Advisory

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