grub2-bhyve -- multiple privilege escalations
Reno Robert reports:
FreeBSD uses a two-process model for running a VM. For booting non-FreeBSD
guests, a modified grub-emu is used (grub-bhyve). Grub-bhyve executes command
from guest grub.cfg file. This is a security problem because grub was never
written to handle inputs from OS as untrusted. In the current design, grub
and guest OS works across trust boundaries. This exposes a grub to untrusted
inputs from guest.
grub-bhyve (emu) is built without SDL graphics support which reduces lot of
gfx attack surface, however font loading code is still accessible. Guest can
provide arbitrary font file, which is parsed by grub-bhyve running as root.
In grub-core/font/font.c, read_section_as_string() allocates
section->length + 1 bytes of memory. However, untrusted
section->length is an unsigned 32-bit number, and the result can
overflow to malloc(0) . This can result in a controlled buffer
overflow via the 'loadfont' command in a guest VM grub2.cfg, eventually leading
to privilege escalation from guest to host.
Reno Robert also reports:
GRUB supports commands to read and write addresses of choice. In
grub-bhyve, these commands provide a way to write to arbitrary virtual
addresses within the grub-bhyve process. This is another way for a guest
grub2.cfg, run by the host, to eventually escalate privileges.
These vulnerabilities are mitigated by disabling the 'loadfont', 'write_dword',
'read_dword', 'inl', 'outl', and other width variants of the same functionality in
grub2-bhyve.
There is also work in progress to sandbox the grub-bhyve utility such that
an escaped guest ends up with nobody:nobody in a Capsium sandbox. It is not
included in 0.40_8.
Discovery 2019-12-09 Entry 2020-02-12 grub2-bhyve
< 0.40_8
https://www.voidsecurity.in/
|