Atstake Security Advisory a102802-1 - The Oracle9iAS Web Cache contains two denial of service vulnerabilities that can be triggered remotely by sending specially crafted HTTP requests. The denial of service issues, which affect version 9.0.2.0.0 for Windows NT/2000 and XP, result in an immediate crash of the service. Oracle released a security advisory for this vulnerability. This advisory can be found here.
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Security Advisory
Advisory Name: Oracle9iAS Web Cache Denial of Service
Release Date: 10-28-2002
Application: Oracle9iAS Web Cache 9.0.2.0.0
Platform: Windows NT/2000/XP
Severity: Remote anonymous DoS
Author: Andreas Junestam (andreas@atstake.com)
Vendor Status: Oracle has released a bulletin
CVE Candidate: CAN-2002-0386
Reference: www.atstake.com/research/advisories/2002/a102802-1.txt
Overview:
Oracle Web Cache is a part of the Oracle Application Server suite. The Web
Cache server is designed to be implemented in front of the Oracle Web
server and act as a caching reverse proxy server.
There exists two different denial of service scenarios, which will cause
the Web Cache service to fail. The denial of service conditions can be
exploited by simple HTTP requests to the Web Cache service.
Detailed Description:
There exists two different denial of service situations in Oracle Web Cache
9.0.2.0.0. The first one is triggered by issuing a HTTP GET request
containing at least one dot-dot-slash contained in the URI:
GET /../ HTTP/1.0
Host: whatever
[CRLF]
[CRLF]
The second denial of service is triggered by issuing an malformed GET
request:
GET / HTTP/1.0
Host: whatever
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
[CRLF]
[CRLF]
Both will create an exception and the service will fail.
Vendor Response:
Vendor was first contacted by @stake: 08-28-2002.
Vendor released a bulletin: 10-04-2002
Oracle has released a bulletin describing a solution to this issue.
Recommendation:
Follow the vendor's instructions detailed in the security bulletin for
this issue.
From the Oracle bulletin:
Customers should follow best security practices for protecting the
administration process from unauthorized users and requests. As such,
Oracle strongly encourages customers to take both of the following
protective measures:
1. Use firewall techniques to restrict access to the Web Cache
administration port.
2. Use the "Secure Subnets" feature of the Web Cache Manager tool to
provide access only to administrators connecting from a list of
permitted IP addresses or subnets.
The potential security vulnerability is being tracked internally at
Oracle and will be fixed by default in the 9.0.4 release of Oracle9i
Application Server.
For more information, see:
http://otn.oracle.com/deploy/security/pdf/2002alert43rev1.pdf
Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) Information:
CAN-2002-0386 Oracle9iAS Web Cache Denial of Service
@stake Vulnerability Reporting Policy:
http://www.atstake.com/research/policy/
@stake Advisory Archive:
http://www.atstake.com/research/advisories/
PGP Key:
http://www.atstake.com/research/pgp_key.asc
Copyright 2002 @stake, Inc. All rights reserved.