Versions of tomato prior to 0.0.6 are affected by a somewhat complex authentication bypass vulnerability in the admin service when only a single access key is configured on the server. The vulnerability allows an attacker to guess the password for the admin service, no matter how complex that password is, in less than 200 requests.
Details
The tomato API has an admin service that is enabled by setting up an access_key in the config options. This access_key is intended to protect the API admin from unauthorized access.
Tomato verifies the access_key by checking to see if the server access_key incorporates the user provided value at any location. This allows an attacker to provide a single character as an access_key, and so long as the server key contains at least one instance of that character it will be considered a valid key.
Proof of Concept
This is the snippet of code that does the comparison to authorize requests.
if (access_key && config.master.api.access_key.indexOf(access_key) !== -1) {
For an access_key that is set to anything that includes the letter 'a' the following request would be authorized.
$ curl -X POST "http://localhost:8081/api/exec" -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d @test -H "access-key: a"
{
"cmd": "ls",
"path": ".",
"stdout": "app.js\nconfig.js\nlog\nnode_modules\nserver.js\n",
"stderr": ""
}
Recommendation
Update to version 0.0.6 or later.
References
Versions of
tomatoprior to 0.0.6 are affected by a somewhat complex authentication bypass vulnerability in the admin service when only a single access key is configured on the server. The vulnerability allows an attacker to guess the password for the admin service, no matter how complex that password is, in less than 200 requests.Details
The tomato API has an admin service that is enabled by setting up an
access_keyin the config options. Thisaccess_keyis intended to protect the API admin from unauthorized access.Tomato verifies the
access_keyby checking to see if the serveraccess_keyincorporates the user provided value at any location. This allows an attacker to provide a single character as anaccess_key, and so long as the server key contains at least one instance of that character it will be considered a valid key.Proof of Concept
This is the snippet of code that does the comparison to authorize requests.
For an access_key that is set to anything that includes the letter 'a' the following request would be authorized.
Recommendation
Update to version 0.0.6 or later.
References