Welcome! Log In Create A New Profile

Advanced

Nginx potentially leaking real filenames?

June 16, 2020 10:46AM
Hi, I am experimenting with various ways of annoying bots and automated vulnerability scanners that reach my service. In one instance I am serving a recursive decompression bomb for all requests for .php files. Since none of my services run PHP, and never have, all such traffic can be safely assumed malicious. Recently (a couple of months since first deployment) I started seeing repeated requests to the server trying to fetch the recursive decompression bomb by its real file name, which should have never been exposed anywhere. Is it possible for nginx to leak the real file name? Through misconfiguration or other means? I am using nginx (version 1.14.2-2+deb10u1) as a reverse proxy and for SSL termination. The custom application behind it is not aware of the existence of the decompression bomb and lives in its own completely separate directory tree. It never reads nor serves any files from the local server, all its data is in physically separate database and cache servers. While I cannot prove absence of vulnerabilities in this custom app, I have not found any evidence of it being used to (nor leaking) local directory contents. The decompression bomb does not contain its file name in its contents. The decompression bomb file <redacted-payload-filename> exists and is properly served in response to .php file requests. Given the above, I believe something in my nginx setup leaked the real file name of the decompression bomb. I've tried using all request methods (GET, HEAD, PUT, POST, DELETE, CONNECT, OPTIONS, TRACE, PATCH) on the server from curl like following:     $ curl --verbose -X <method> <redacted>.com/index.php and (as expected) none of the responses leaked the file name in any of the headers nor contents. Below is a redacted and inlined version of my nginx configuration. There is only one server defined, the Debian default server config has been removed. The error code mapping is there to avoid triggering high error rate alerts when hit by hundreds of consecutive bot requests. I would appreciate any help in figuring out what I am doing wrong and how could the <redacted-payload-filename> have been leaked? Thanks, Pizab # nginx.conf http {     sendfile on;     tcp_nopush on;     tcp_nodelay on;     keepalive_timeout 165;     types_hash_max_size 2048;     include /etc/nginx/mime.types;     default_type application/octet-stream;     limit_req_zone "php" zone=attackzone:10m rate=1r/s;     ssl_certificate <redacted>;     ssl_certificate_key <redacted>;     ssl_protocols TLSv1 TLSv1.1 TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3;     ssl_session_cache shared:SSL:10m;     ssl_session_timeout 10m;     server_tokens off;     access_log /var/log/nginx/access.log;     error_log /var/log/nginx/error.log;     client_body_buffer_size 1M;     server {         listen   443  default_server ssl;         listen   80;         server_name <redacted>.com;         rewrite_log on;         location /.well-known/acme-challenge {             alias /var/www/html/.well-known/acme         }         location / {             access_log /<redacted>/logs/nginx_access.             proxy_set_header Host $http_host;             proxy_redirect off;             proxy_connect_timeout 60;             proxy_read_timeout 160;             proxy_pass localhost:10000 localhost:10000 ;         }         error_page 429 =229 /error429;         location ~ \.php$ {             limit_rate_after 1k;             limit_rate 2k;             limit_req zone=attackzone burst=2;             limit_req_status 429;             keepalive_timeout 0;             root /var/www/html/<redacted>/;             default_type "application/xml";             add_header Content-Encoding "br";             try_files /<redacted-payload-filename> =400;         }         location = /error429 {             return 229 "Too many requests.";         }     } }
_______________________________________________
nginx mailing list
nginx@nginx.org
http://mailman.nginx.org/mailman/listinfo/nginx
Subject Author Posted

Nginx potentially leaking real filenames?

pizwer88 June 16, 2020 10:46AM



Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.

Click here to login

Online Users

Guests: 120
Record Number of Users: 8 on April 13, 2023
Record Number of Guests: 421 on December 02, 2018
Powered by nginx      Powered by FreeBSD      PHP Powered      Powered by MariaDB      ipv6 ready