Return-Path: X-Original-To: apmail-hbase-issues-archive@www.apache.org Delivered-To: apmail-hbase-issues-archive@www.apache.org Received: from mail.apache.org (hermes.apache.org [140.211.11.3]) by minotaur.apache.org (Postfix) with SMTP id 7E945189AB for ; Thu, 12 Nov 2015 03:06:12 +0000 (UTC) Received: (qmail 19406 invoked by uid 500); 12 Nov 2015 03:06:12 -0000 Delivered-To: apmail-hbase-issues-archive@hbase.apache.org Received: (qmail 19167 invoked by uid 500); 12 Nov 2015 03:06:12 -0000 Mailing-List: contact issues-help@hbase.apache.org; run by ezmlm Precedence: bulk List-Help: List-Unsubscribe: List-Post: List-Id: Delivered-To: mailing list issues@hbase.apache.org Received: (qmail 19004 invoked by uid 99); 12 Nov 2015 03:06:11 -0000 Received: from arcas.apache.org (HELO arcas) (140.211.11.28) by apache.org (qpsmtpd/0.29) with ESMTP; Thu, 12 Nov 2015 03:06:11 +0000 Received: from arcas.apache.org (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by arcas (Postfix) with ESMTP id 252122C1F60 for ; Thu, 12 Nov 2015 03:06:11 +0000 (UTC) Date: Thu, 12 Nov 2015 03:06:11 +0000 (UTC) From: "Andrew Purtell (JIRA)" To: issues@hbase.apache.org Message-ID: In-Reply-To: References: Subject: [jira] [Updated] (HBASE-14799) Commons-collections object deserialization remote command execution vulnerability MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-JIRA-FingerPrint: 30527f35849b9dde25b450d4833f0394 [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-14799?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ] Andrew Purtell updated HBASE-14799: ----------------------------------- Attachment: (was: HBASE-14799-0.98.patch) > Commons-collections object deserialization remote command execution vulnerability > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: HBASE-14799 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HBASE-14799 > Project: HBase > Issue Type: Bug > Reporter: Andrew Purtell > Priority: Critical > Fix For: 0.94.28, 0.98.17 > > Attachments: HBASE-14799-0.94.patch, HBASE-14799-0.98.patch > > > Read: http://foxglovesecurity.com/2015/11/06/what-do-weblogic-websphere-jboss-jenkins-opennms-and-your-application-have-in-common-this-vulnerability/ > TL;DR: If you have commons-collections on your classpath and accept and process Java object serialization data, then you probably have an exploitable remote command execution vulnerability. > 0.94 and earlier HBase releases are vulnerable because we might read in and rehydrate serialized Java objects out of RPC packet data in HbaseObjectWritable using ObjectInputStream#readObject (see https://hbase.apache.org/0.94/xref/org/apache/hadoop/hbase/io/HbaseObjectWritable.html#714) and we have commons-collections on the classpath on the server. > 0.98 also carries some limited exposure to this problem through inclusion of backwards compatible deserialization code in HbaseObjectWritableFor96Migration. This is used by the 0.94-to-0.98 migration utility, and by the AccessController when reading permissions from the ACL table serialized in legacy format by 0.94. Unprivileged users cannot run the tool nor access the ACL table. > Unprivileged users can however attack a 0.94 installation. An attacker might be able to use the method discussed on that blog post to capture valid HBase RPC payloads for 0.94 and prior versions, rewrite them to embed an exploit, and replay them to trigger a remote command execution with the privileges of the account under which the HBase RegionServer daemon is running. > We need to make a patch release of 0.94 that changes HbaseObjectWritable to disallow processing of random Java object serializations. This will be a compatibility break that might affect old style coprocessors, which quite possibly may rely on this catch-all in HbaseObjectWritable for custom object (de)serialization. We can introduce a new configuration setting, "hbase.allow.legacy.object.serialization", defaulting to false. > To be thorough, we can also use the new configuration setting "hbase.allow.legacy.object.serialization" (defaulting to false) in 0.98 to prevent the AccessController from falling back to the vulnerable legacy code. This turns out to not affect the ability to migrate permissions because TablePermission implements Writable, which is safe, not Serializable. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)