Name |
SOAP Array Overflow |
|
Likelyhood of attack |
Typical severity |
High |
High |
|
Summary |
An attacker sends a SOAP request with an array whose actual length exceeds the length indicated in the request. When a data structure including a SOAP array is instantiated, the sender transmits the size of the array as an explicit parameter along with the data. If the server processing the transmission naively trusts the specified size, then an attacker can intentionally understate the size of the array, possibly resulting in a buffer overflow if the server attempts to read the entire data set into the memory it allocated for a smaller array. This, in turn, can lead to a server crash or even the execution of arbitrary code. |
Prerequisites |
The targeted SOAP server must trust that the array size as stated in messages it receives is correct, but read through the entire content of the message regardless of the stated size of the array. |
Solutions | If the server either verifies the correctness of the stated array size or if the server stops processing an array once the stated number of elements have been read, regardless of the actual array size, then this attack will fail. The former detects the malformed SOAP message while the latter ensures that the server does not attempt to load more data than was allocated for. |
Related Weaknesses |
CWE ID
|
Description
|
CWE-805 |
Buffer Access with Incorrect Length Value |
|
Related CAPECS |
CAPEC ID
|
Description
|
CAPEC-100 |
Buffer Overflow attacks target improper or missing bounds checking on buffer operations, typically triggered by input injected by an adversary. As a consequence, an adversary is able to write past the boundaries of allocated buffer regions in memory, causing a program crash or potentially redirection of execution as per the adversaries' choice. |
|
Taxonomy: WASC |
Entry ID
|
Entry Name
|
35 |
SOAP Array Abuse |
|