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Thursday, March 8, 2018

[FD] [RT-SA-2018-001] Arbitrary Redirect in Tuleap

Advisory: Arbitrary Redirect in Tuleap RedTeam Pentesting discovered an arbitrary redirect vulnerability in the redirect mechanism of the application lifecycle management platform Tuleap. Details ======= Product: Tuleap Affected Versions: > 9.17.99.93 Fixed Versions: >= 9.17.99.93 Vulnerability Type: Arbitrary Redirect Security Risk: low Vendor URL: https://www.tuleap.org/ Vendor Status: fixed version released Vendor Issue URL: http://ift.tt/2G8SHko Advisory URL: http://ift.tt/2D8nYAM Advisory Status: published CVE: GENERIC-MAP-NOMATCH CVE URL: http://ift.tt/1jQGmEN Introduction ============ "Tuleap is an open source tool for Scrum, Kanban, waterfall, requirement management. Plan, track, code and collaborate on software projects, you get everything at hand." (from the Tuleap website [1]) More Details ============ RedTeam Pentesting discovered an arbitrary redirect vulnerability in the way Tuleap handles redirects. Usually this function is only used in Tuleap after an successful login to assigned trackers, however the redirect can be used indepented of whether a user is authenticated to the application. While the application employs a URL filter to prevent arbitrary redirects, the URL filter can be bypassed. This allows attackers to redirect users to a different website, if a user opens an attacker prepared URL. The filter can be bypassed by using protocol relative URLs, which omit the leading protocol identifier. These arbitrary URLs are prefixed with two slashes, which instructs the browser to use the same protocol as the current page. This behaviour is specified in RFC 3986 [2] in section 5.4. Proof of Concept ================ The following URL to an example installation of Tuleap will redirect users to an attacker controlled website: http://ift.tt/2FsLnP6 Workaround ========== Currently no workaround is known. Fix === Upgrade to at least tuleap version 9.17.99.93. Security Risk ============= Attackers may convice users to use a prepared link to access a valid Tuleap instance, which then redirects users to a fake login page. This can greatly increase the effectiveness of phishing attacks and may allow attackers to steal user credentials more effectively. However, no credentials or sensitive information can be extracted directly. Furthermore, the website to which users are going to be redirected will be displayed in the browser location bar so that users may identify the attack. Therefore, we rate this vulnerability with a low risk. Nevertheless, it is very easy for attackers to identify this vulnerability and create malicious URLs, which makes it very likely that attackers might abuse this. Timeline ======== 2018-01-02 Vulnerability identified 2018-01-11 Customer approved disclosure to vendor 2018-02-13 Vendor notified 2018-02-14 Vendor released fixed version 2018-03-05 Vendor made issue public 2018-03-08 Advisory released References ========== [1] http://ift.tt/2G8SJsw [2] http://ift.tt/NUWxBd RedTeam Pentesting GmbH ======================= RedTeam Pentesting offers individual penetration tests performed by a team of specialised IT-security experts. Hereby, security weaknesses in company networks or products are uncovered and can be fixed immediately. As there are only few experts in this field, RedTeam Pentesting wants to share its knowledge and enhance the public knowledge with research in security-related areas. The results are made available as public security advisories. More information about RedTeam Pentesting can be found at: http://ift.tt/1ixScMF Working at RedTeam Pentesting ============================= RedTeam Pentesting is looking for penetration testers to join our team in Aachen, Germany. If you are interested please visit: http://ift.tt/2uIYRk1

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