CVE-2023-34998
An authentication bypass vulnerability exists in the OAS Engine functionality of Open Automation Software OAS Platform v18.00.0072. A specially crafted series of network requests can lead to arbitrary authentication. An attacker can sniff network traffic to trigger this vulnerability.
The versions below were either tested or verified to be vulnerable by Talos or confirmed to be vulnerable by the vendor.
Open Automation Software OAS Platform v18.00.0072
OAS Platform - https://openautomationsoftware.com/knowledge-base/getting-started-with-oas/
8.1 - CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:H/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H
CWE-319 - Cleartext Transmission of Sensitive Information
The OAS Platform, capable of running on a variety of systems including Windows, Linux, and Docker, was built to facilitate simplified communication between various proprietary devices and applications that might otherwise be incompatible. This is done through use of the “Universal Data Connector”. In the “Connectivity Layer” OAS acts as an “IoT Gateway and protocol bus,” allowing for native communication with devices, databases, and cloud services. Connectors implemented in the “Connectivity Layer” can then communicate with each other via the OAS Live Data Cloud, representing the “Aggregation Layer”. This information can then be stored, analyzed, and visualized through the data historian, alarm logging/notification, and visualization tools that make up the “Application Layer”. OAS additionally exposes a few sets of developer tools, allowing for programmatic access to the platform.
Many of the valid OAS Engine requests require application administrator credentials to run successfully. These credentials are wrapped in a U_EP
protobuf and then included as a field inside of the greater request. The format of this structure resembles the following, where the DataAsBytes
field contains the encrypted and serialized data of a valid User_EncryptedPassword
protobuf.
message U_EP {
int32 Version = 1;
int32 Seed = 2;
bytes DataAsBytes = 3;
}
message User_EncryptedPassword {
string Username = 1;
string EncyprtedPassword = 2;
}
When a privileged request is sent by a legitimate administrator to the OAS Engine, the traffic is sent unencrypted across the wire. As such, it is possible for a bad actor capable of sniffing traffic between the client and OAS Engine to capture a valid U_EP
. This captured U_EP
protobuf can then be used by the attacker to craft their own successful privileged request. Further, any captured U_EP
remains valid until the associated user account has been deleted.
When combined with the user creation and save configuration functionality, it is possible to gain access to the underlying system.
Access to the OAS Engine configuration server and its traffic should be restricted to exclusively those hosts authorized for configuration.
The fixed version v19 can be downloaded from: https://openautomationsoftware.com/downloads/releases/
2023-06-22 - Vendor Disclosure
2023-09-02 - Vendor Patch Release
2023-09-05 - Public Release
Discovered by a member of Cisco Talos.