Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2023 03:17:36 +0300 From: turistu To: oss-security@…ts.openwall.com Subject: with firefox on X11, any page can pastejack you anytime

Note to the moderator: I have already submitted this to the firefox people three weeks ago, and according to them, this is not a real security issue, or at least not worse than those pesky scripts which you cannot kill without killing firefox itself; if you think the same, just ignore this without replying.

I would however appreciate if you let this through and so give it some visibility so that the other 2 or 3 people who may be affected by this could learn about it.

Thank you very much.

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In firefox running on X11, any script from any page can freely write to the primary selection, and that can be easily exploited to run arbitrary code on the user’s machine.

No user interaction is necessary – any page able to run javascript can do it, including e.g. a page from a background tab of a minimized window, an iframe inside such a window, an error page, a sandboxed iframe, a page that has reloaded itself via meta http-equiv=refresh, etc.

This applies to all the versions of mozilla/firefox and their derivatives (seamonkey, etc) that I was able to test, including the latest nightly.

Example

The simplest example, which works in the default configurations of systems like OpenBSD or Alpine Linux (= any Unix/Linux system where Wayland is not the default and the default shell does not implement bracketed-paste), would go like this:

Load the following snippet in firefox:

<pre></pre>
intentionally left blank

Then pretend to forget about it, and go about your work. Sooner or later, when trying to paste something in the terminal with shift-Insert or middle click, you will end up running the command writeXPrimary() has injected just between your copy and paste.

live example of that snippet: https://turistu.github.io/firefox/pastejack.html

Short technical explanation

Browsers like firefox have the concepts of “secure context” (e.g. https://) and “transient user activation”; the javascript from the page gets some temporary powers as soon as you have interacted even so little with the page, like clicked, touched, etc.

For instance, writing with Clipboard.writeText() to the windows-style Ctrl-C Ctrl-V clipboard selection is only possible from secure contexts and only in the short while after the user has clicked a button, etc on the page. As this bug demonstrates, those prerequisites are not needed for writing to the primary selection, which on X11 is much more used and much more valuable.

Workaround

Without patching firefox, the only workaround I can think about is disabling the Clipboard.selectAllChildren() function from an addon’s content script, e.g. like this:

let block = function(){ throw Error('blocked') };
exportFunction(block, Selection.prototype, { defineAs: 'selectAllChildren' });

Complete extension here at https://github.com/turistu/odds-n-ends/raw/main/firefox/no-sel.xpi.

I tried to submit it to addons.mozilla.org but they didn’t accept it. If you’re running firefox-esr, the development edition or nightly, you can just set xpinstall.signatures.required to true in about:config and install it with firefox no-sel.xpi.

Firefox Patch

diff -r 9b362770f30b layout/generic/nsFrameSelection.cpp
--- a/layout/generic/nsFrameSelection.cpp	Fri Oct 06 12:03:17 2023 +0000
+++ b/layout/generic/nsFrameSelection.cpp	Sun Oct 08 11:04:41 2023 +0300
@@ -3345,6 +3345,10 @@
     return;  // Don't care if we are still dragging.
   }
 
+  if (aReason &amp; nsISelectionListener::JS_REASON) {
+    return;
+  }
+
   if (!aDocument || aSelection.IsCollapsed()) {
 #ifdef DEBUG_CLIPBOARD
     fprintf(stderr, "CLIPBOARD: no selection/collapsed selection\n");

The idea of this patch was to always prevent javascript from indirectly messing with the primary selection via the Selection API. However, it turned out that the JS_REASON flag was not reliable; if javascript calls some function like addRange() or selectAllChildren() while the user has started dragging but hasn’t released the mouse button yet, that code will be called without that flag but with the text set by javascript, not the text selected by the user. However, I think that this patch is still enough to fill the glaring hole opened by selectAllChildren().

About the example and bracketed-paste

The bracketed paste feature of bash/readline and zsh means that you cannot just append a CR or LF to the payload and be done, it’s the user who has to press ENTER for it to run.

However, workarounds exist. For instance, some terminals like mlterm don’t filter out the pasted data, and you can terminate the pasting mode early by inserting a \e[201~ in the payload.

For bash, you can take advantage of some quirks in the readline library to turn off the highlighting and make the payload invisible to the user. E.g.:

let payload = 'touch ~/LOL-' + Date.now() / 1000;
writeXPrimary('\n' + payload + '\n'.repeat(100) + ' '.repeat(30)
	+ '\n'.repeat(100))

which will confuse the user with the same screen as when some stray background job had written something to the terminal:

user@...t:~$ : previous unrelated command
user@...t:~$	&lt;-- paste here
#   &lt;-- cursor here, most users will just hit Enter to get a new prompt

live example of that snippet: https://turistu.github.io/firefox/bash-pastejack.html

Just to be clear, I don’t think that either mlterm, bash, nor the shells that don’t do have that bracketed-paste feature are at fault here in any way (and I personally always turn off that misfeature as it badly interferes with my workflow): It’s firefox which should get all the blame for letting random javascript evade its pretended “sandbox” in this way.

About Wayland

For firefox running in Wayland, writeXPrimary() will only succeed when the firefox window (the main window, not necessarily the tab the code runs in) has the focus. Otherwise the selection will be cleared. At first I assumed that this is something specific to the Wayland protocol, but that turned out to be utterly false; it’s just some quirk, bug or “feature” specific to either firefox itself or GTK.

But I think that’s still bad enough, even if the page should take care to only set the selection when the main window has gained focus.

And of course, all this doesn’t affect the situation where you’re copying and pasting in another firefox tab with a different context, origin, etc; and all the other situations where you don’t appreciate having random javascript you don’t even know about messing with your copy & paste.

===

This is a slightly edited version of https://github.com/turistu/odds-n-ends/blob/main/firefox/pastejack.md.

I will correct any errors or omissions and also add more info there.

  • ClemaX@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Maybe Firefox needs to add a new “Clipboard access” permission that can be granted on a site-per-site basis. When disabled, simple highlight and copy could still be enabled if hidden text cannot be added in between normal text.

    The same permission model could be used system wide, but I do not think that such a feature exists on the X server or Wayland. Maybe using a wrapper that runs before the Desktop Environment?

  • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    There’s one tiny little problem with the hijack scenario – people only ever paste from the primary selection immediately after selecting something themselves (and thus overwriting whatever was in there). That’s precisely because the primary selection is so easy to overwrite (basically when you select anything), so you want to select and then immediately paste so you don’t lose it.

    So in reality this scenario in which a random page injects something in the primary selection and the user pastes it sometime later in a terminal, of all things, probably has like a million to one chance of occuring.

    PS: Also, just for trivia, any user who’s been around the console for a while will hit Ctrl+C out of reflex when confronted with unexpected output, not Enter.

  • jsdz@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I tried to submit it to addons.mozilla.org but they didn’t accept it.

    It sort of looks as if they did accept it. If they were hesitant, perhaps it has something to do with the description suggesting that it’s a broken and pointless temporary kludge, as well as calling Firefox “removed”, and the ridiculously irrelevant screenshot.

    I didn’t realise it was that easy to build a simple firefox extension like that. Maybe I’ll modify it to disable the whole clipboard api and some other stuff.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Every piece of software is insecure, because people make errors and mistakes.

      When a law of nature prevents us from doing what we’d want, the right decision is to adapt our approaches.

      That would return us back to modularity, Unix philosophy and all such stuff.

      Yes, I think Xorg wouldn’t survive the filter, but it wouldn’t be the only thing.