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2017 Runner-Up: Neville Longbottom

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In second place for the 2017 Underhanded Crypto Contest is “Neville Longbottom” for an application that uses AES to encrypt data, but has special behavior for long messages.

For this entry, the author was awarded a prize of $500 provided by NCC Group Cryptography Services ; at the authors request, the prize has been donated to the EFF.

From the author:

Introduction

My submission to the Underhanded Crypto Contest (2017) is a simple tool for encrypting messages with AES-128-CBC. You can compare the tool’s output with output from OpenSSL’s implementation of AES-128-CBC and they will agree exactly on short messages. However, on longer messages, a bug is triggered causing the encryption key to be zeroed out with high probability. Hence long ciphertexts can be all decrypted with the key “00000000000000000000000000000000”. The same bug is triggered upon decryption so that the incorrectly-encrypted ciphertexts get decrypted to the correct plaintext, making the backdoor harder to detect. Due to the nature of the bug and because the hex-encoded ciphertexts are twice as long as their plaintexts, there is a small range of ciphertext lengths that will be decrypted incorrectly (making the backdoor detectable).

The files are organized as follows.

submission │ ├─ easycrypt.c o The encryption/decryption tool's source code. ├─ Makefile o A makefile for building the code. Run `make`. │ ├─ test o Unit tests for the encryption which compare │ ├─ small-message.txt it against OpenSSL to make sure we've │ └─ test.sh implemented AES-128-CBC "correctly". │ ├─ test-backdoor o Tests that reveal the backdoor, demonstrating │ └─ test-backdoor.sh that long messages can be decrypted with the │ key "00000000000000000000000000000000". │ └─ tinyaes o A small AES library I copied off of GitHub. ├── aes.c https://github.com/kokke/tiny-AES128-C └── aes.h The Backdoor

The backdoor depends heavily on how the compiler decides to lay out variables and buffers on the stack. I have only tested it on the following systems, so you may wish to acquire a similar one if you’re going to try to reproduce it.

Arch linux with gcc 6.3.1. Debian 8.7 with gcc 4.9.2 (Debian 4.9.2-10).

The heart of this backdoor is the following line in bin2hex():

memset(hex_out, 0, strlen(hex_out));

If we pass uninitialized memory to the hex_out parameter of bin2hex(), it will zero-out the memory up until the next zero byte. This is how the backdoor will zero-out the key.

At the top of encrypt(), the following variables are defined.

unsigned char key[16]; char buffer[SM_BUF_SIZE]; unsigned char cipher_block[SM_BUF_SIZE]; unsigned char IV[16]; size_t i = 0;

These variables have been arranged specially so that the compiler places buffer just before key on the stack. When the backdoor is being triggered, encrypt()…

Decodes the key and IV from hex into byte arrays. If we allowed main() to pass in a pointer to the raw binary key on its stack frame then to zero it out we would have to zero through the saved-RIP and the program would crash when encrypt() returns. Accepting the key in hex gives us an excuse to have our own key buffer and control where it is on the stack. Fills buffer with the hex-encoded ciphertext header. We’re passing the uninitialized buffer into getHexHeader() which seems fine since getHexHeader() is only supposed to write the header string into the buffer we pass it. However, getHexHeader() internally passes the uninitialized buffer to bin2hex() so the memset() line will start zeroing out at the start of buffer and stop at the next zero byte. Encrypts the plaintext with AES-128 in CBC mode, using key as the key. Since key has been zeroed out, the plaintext is encrypted with a zero key.

The backdoor works exactly the same way inside decrypt(). Any other bugs that exist in this code are accidental and not part of the submission.

In order for the zeroing-out to work properly, the uninitialized buffer memory needs to contain only nonzero bytes. Otherwise, the zeroing-out won’t reach the key. This is guaranteed for long plaintexts/ciphertexts by the readString() function which main calls directly before encrypt() or decrypt(). When the input is long enough, readString()’s larger buffer will be completely filled with nonzero bytes and so by the time encrypt() or decrypt() are called, their smaller buffer (residing at roughly the same location on the stack) will be full of nonzero bytes.

The buffer in readString() is initialized to all zeroes, so if the input is too short then there’s a good chance of a zero byte remaining between the start of encrypt()’s or decrypt()’s buffer and the key buffer, preventing the key from being zeroed-out.

Note that if the key itself contains a zero byte then the zeroing-out will stop there. For a random 16-byte key, the probability that the entire key gets zeroed out is approximately 1 16/256 = 93.8%. Even in cases where the key is not completely zeroed-out it will still be greatly weakened with high probability.

Tests

The test/test.sh script compares the tool’s output to OpenSSL’s for a small plaintext. Hopefully this will be enough to convince some people that the implementation is correct. If not, it could even be “improved” to check some of the test vectors that are published for AES in CBC mode, as long as they are shorter than the threshold for activating the backdoor.

The backdoor can be tested by running test-backdoor/test-backdoor.sh. I obtain the following output showing that the backdoor is inactive up to 61-block (976-byte) plaintexts, decryption is broken for 62-to-124-block (992-byte to 1984-byte) plaintexts, and the backdoor is active for 125-block (2496-byte) and longer plaintexts.

0 BLOCKS: CORRECT INACTIVE 1 BLOCKS: CORRECT INACTIVE 2 BLOCKS: CORRECT INACTIVE 3 BLOCKS: CORRECT INACTIVE 4 BLOCKS: CORRECT INACTIVE ... ... 58 BLOCKS: CORRECT INACTIVE 59 BLOCKS: CORRECT INACTIVE 60 BLOCKS: CORRECT INACTIVE 61 BLOCKS: CORRECT INACTIVE 62 BLOCKS: INCORRECT INACTIVE 63 BLOCKS: INCORRECT INACTIVE 64 BLOCKS: INCORRECT INACTIVE 65 BLOCKS: INCORRECT INACTIVE ... ... 121 BLOCKS: INCORRECT INACTIVE 122 BLOCKS: INCORRECT INACTIVE 123 BLOCKS: INCORRECT INACTIVE 124 BLOCKS: INCORRECT INACTIVE 125 BLOCKS: CORRECT ACTIVE 126 BLOCKS: CORRECT ACTIVE 127 BLOCKS: CORRECT ACTIVE 128 BLOCKS: CORRECT ACTIVE ... ... Improvements

There are several ways to improve upon this backdoor which I did not have time to try. Someone else may take these up as challenges.

Adjust the buffer sizes and stack layout in encrypt() and decrypt() to minimize (or eliminate!) the range of lengths decryption is broken for. Figure out how to precisely tune the length at which the backdoor activates by adjusting the buffer sizes. An auditor would likely recognize the memset() line in bin2hex() as out of place. There is probably a better excuse to run the memset() line ― maybe rearrange the code and zero-out the hex key “for security” and somehow it happens to be missing its null-termination byte.

The code is available for download .

The 2017 Sponsors:
2017 Runner-Up: Neville Longbottom
2017 Runner-Up: Neville Longbottom

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