8 points

CreateProcess spawns cmd.exe even when that isn’t asked? I find that… a little insane.

Anti Commercial AI thingy

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

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5 points

Seems like an ancient hack to allow bat files to be run via that function.

I expect windows is full of stuff like that.

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3 points

Yeah, backwards compatibility is good when it isn’t a security issue.

Anti Commercial AI thingy

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

Inserted with a keystroke running this script on linux with X11

#!/usr/bin/env nix-shell
#!nix-shell -i bash --packages xautomation xclip

sleep 0.2
(echo '::: spoiler Anti Commercial AI thingy
[CC BY-NC-SA 4.0](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/)

Inserted with a keystroke running this script on linux with X11
```bash'
cat "$0"
echo '```
:::') | xclip -selection clipboard
xte "keydown Control_L" "key V" "keyup Control_L"

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4 points
*

I can barely live with that licence thingy, but don’t paste that tutorial into your comment ffs.

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6 points

Not a fan of the name 🤷‍♀️

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2 points

i’m not understanding how this is supposed to be so severe. if an attacker has the ability to change the arguments to a CreateProcess call, aren’t you hosed already? they could just change it to invoke any command or batch file they wanted.

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4 points

You wouldn’t be hosed on Linux for example. Note that this applies to the arguments to the program, not just the program itself.

In other words if I do run(["echo", untrusted_input]) it would be totally fine on Linux.

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-2 points

honestly i wouldn’t trust your linux example at all, what happens with run([“echo”, “&& rm -rf /“])

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5 points

It would print “&& rm -rf /“ and nothing bad would happen.

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3 points

That’s entirely dependent on the application. In many cases the command would be hard-coded in the application, in which case you’re right. But some applications have good reasons to pass user-supplied arguments to scripts. Imagine a case where an application generates PDFs through a batch script, for instance. It might make sense to let users specify the filename, but then it does need proper escaping. In such a case it’s a huge risk if it turns out the escaping rules suddenly changed because Windows silently invoked cmd.exe under the hood.

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-2 points

even in your hypothetical of a file name passed in through the args, either the attacker has enough access to run said tool with whatever args they want, or, they have taken over that process and can inject whatever args they want.

either attack vector requires a prior breach of the system. you’re owned either way.

the only way this actually works as an exploit is if there are poorly written services out there that blindly call through to CreateProcess that take in user sourced input without any sanitization, which if you’re doing that then no duh you’re gonna have a bad time.

cmd.exe is always going to be invoked if you’re executing a batch script, it’s literally the interpreter for .bat files. the issue is, as usual, code that might be blindly taking user input and not even bothering to sanitize it before using it.

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3 points

take in user sourced input without any sanitization

But that’s exactly the problem: these applications were sanitizing the input using the APIs provided by their language standard libraries. Except that sanitization proved insufficient because the requirements for sanitization differ greatly when the command is interpreted by cmd.exe as opposed to running regular executables. This is such a big footgun in the Windows API that it was overlooked by seemingly every major programming language implementation out there.

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