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2.5 KiB
2.5 KiB
Web Cache Deception Attack
Tools
- Param Miner - PortSwigger
This extension identifies hidden, unlinked parameters. It's particularly useful for finding web cache poisoning vulnerabilities.
Exploit
- Browser requests
http://www.example.com/home.php/non-existent.css
. - Server returns the content of
http://www.example.com/home.php
, most probably with HTTP caching headers that instruct to not cache this page. - The response goes through the proxy.
- The proxy identifies that the file has a css extension.
- Under the cache directory, the proxy creates a directory named home.php, and caches the imposter "CSS" file (non-existent.css) inside.
Methodology of the attack - example
- Normal browsing, visit home :
https://www.example.com/myaccount/home/
- Open the malicious link :
https://www.example.com/myaccount/home/malicious.css
- The page is displayed as /home and the cache is saving the page
- Open a private tab with the previous URL :
https://www.paypal.com/myaccount/home/malicous.css
- The content of the cache is displayed
Video of the attack by Omer Gil - Web Cache Deception Attack in PayPal Home Page
Methodology 2
- Find an unkeyed input for a Cache Poisoning
Values: User-Agent Values: Cookie Header: X-Forwarded-Host Header: X-Host Header: X-Forwarded-Server Header: X-Forwarded-Scheme (header; also in combination with X-Forwarded-Host) Header: X-Original-URL (Symfony) Header: X-Rewrite-URL (Symfony)
- Cache poisonning attack - Example for
X-Forwarded-Host
unkeyed input (remember to use a buster to only cache this webpage instead of the main page of the website)GET /test?buster=123 HTTP/1.1 Host: target.com X-Forwarded-Host: test"><script>alert(1)</script> HTTP/1.1 200 OK Cache-Control: public, no-cache [..] <meta property="og:image" content="https://test"><script>alert(1)</script>">