Dobrica Pavlinušić's random unstructured stuff
Dell RAC: Revision 21
* create ceritifcates {file: cert.sh}
* install debian tools {file: mitm-install.sh} ^ Dell's documentation * {file: DellRemoteAccessController5Security.Pdf} * {file: DellRemoteAccessController4Security.Pdf} {toc: } I will try to collect useful protocol information about Dell's (actually ""<>) RAC protocol My main goal is to use Dell RAC from Linux, without all troubles described in "my blog post"<http://blog.rot13.org/2009/12/dells_rac_support_under_linux_drek.html> ^ Proprietary ports | Port | Protocol | Type | Ver | Enc | Direction | Usage | Configurable | | 3668 | Proprietary | TCP | 1.0 | None | In/Out | CD/diskette virtual media service | Yes | | 3669 | Proprietary | TCP | 1.0 | 128-bit SSL | In/Out | CD/diskette virtual media service | Yes | | 5900 | Proprietary | TCP | 1.0 | 128-bit SSL | In/Out | Video redirection | Yes | | 5901 | Proprietary | TCP | 1.0 | 128-bit SSL | In/Out | Keyboard/Mouse redirection | Yes | ^ Supported SSL Cipher Suites DRAC 5 supports SSL version 3 and TLS version 1.0. The following are ciphers supported on DRAC 5: * SSL_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_MD5 * SSL_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_SHA * SSL_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA * SSL_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_MD5 * TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_128_CBC_SHA * TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA ^ IPMI RMCP+ Encryption DRAC 5 IPMI over LAN and SOL use RMCP+ for Authentication and Key exchange. For details on the RMCP+ protocol, see the IPMI 2.0 specification. DRAC 5 IPMI supports the following encryption algorithms: * AES-CBC-128 (128-bit AES with CBC) * RC4-128 (128-bit RC4) ^ Console Redirection Security ^^ Authentication and Encryption DRAC 5 can continuously redirect the managed system's video, keyboard and mouse (KVM) to the management station. It is a very powerful feature, is very easy to use, and does not require any software installation on the managed system. A user can access this feature to remotely manage the system as if they were sitting in front of the system. A security authentication and encryption protocol has been implemented in console redirection to prevent a hostile, rogue client from breaking into the console redirect path without authenticating though the web server. 128-bit SSL encryption secures the keyboard keystrokes during the remote console redirection and therefore does not allow unauthorized "snooping" of the network traffic. The following sequence of security protocol operations is performed during the establishment of a console redirection session: # A user logs into the main web GUI then clicks the "Open Consoles" tab. # The Web GUI sends a pre-authentication request to the DRAC 5 web server via the HTTPS channel (SSL encrypted). # The DRAC 5 web server returns a set of secret data (including an encryption key) via the SSL channel. The console redirection authentication key (32 bytes long) is dynamically generated to prevent replay attack. # The Console redirection client sends a login command with an authentication key to a console redirection server keyboard/mouse port for authentication via SSL channel. # If authentication is successful, a console redirection session and two console redirection pipes (one for keyboard/mouse and one for video) are established. The keyboard/mouse pipe is always SSL encrypted. The video pipe encryption is optional. (Users can choose to encrypt or not to encrypt the video pipe before they start their console redirection session). ^ Video redirection .pre root@klin:~# ssldump -r /tmp/rac_t1.pcap New TCP connection #1: klin.local(52028) <-> 10.60.0.102(5900) 1 1 0.0148 (0.0148) C>S Handshake ClientHello Version 3.0 cipher suites SSL_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_MD5 SSL_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA SSL_RSA_WITH_DES_CBC_SHA compression methods NULL 1 2 0.0165 (0.0016) S>C Handshake ServerHello Version 3.0 session_id[0]= cipherSuite SSL_RSA_WITH_RC4_128_MD5 compressionMethod NULL .pre ^^ SSL man in the middle First, we need a really old distribution to support cipher suites. http://www.debian.org/distrib/archive openssl versions: * potato - 0.9.4-5 - includes just sslv2, so it's too old * woody - 0.9.6c-2.woody.7 .pre sudo debootstrap --arch i386 woody woody http://archive.debian.org/debian-archive/debian sudo chroot woody .pre .pre # /etc/apt/sources.list deb http://archive.debian.org/debian-archive/debian potato main non-free contrib deb http://archive.debian.org/debian-non-US/ potato/non-US main contrib non-free .pre .pre apt-get install stunnel openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -out cert.pem -keyout cert.pem # https mitm stunnel -p cert.pem -d 443 -r 5443 stunnel -c -d 5443 -r 10.60.0.100:443 # 5900 mitm stunnel -p cert.pem -d 5900 -r 5999 stunnel -c -d 5999 -r 10.60.0.100:5900 .pre Check ssl connection .pre ssldump -i eth0 'port 5900' -A -N .pre Following is *bad* .pre 2 2 0.0489 (0.0000) S>CV3.0(2) Alert level fatal value handshake_failure .pre Dump unencrypted communication .pre sudo tshark -w /tmp/5900-plain.pcap 'port 5999' .pre 5900 and 5901 traffic with two keystrokes: {image: drac-traffic.png} * http://svn.rot13.org/index.cgi/scripts/view/trunk/mitm-ssl.pl Dump all traffic: * 5999 - unencrypted 5900 * 5443 - unencrypted 443 (https) * 5901 - just port redir .pre sudo tshark -w /tmp/590x-3.pcap -i any 'port 5999 or port 5901 or port 5443' .pre .pre # create client certificate openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -nodes -out ssl.cert -keyout ssl.key root@opr:~/rac-ssl# ./mitm-ssl.pl --lport 5900 --laddr 10.60.0.91 --rport 5900 --raddr 10.60.0.100 --serverkey ssl.key --servercert ssl.cert root@opr:~/rac-ssl# ./mitm-ssl.pl --lport 443 --laddr 10.60.0.91 --rport 443 --raddr 10.60.0.100 --serverkey ssl.key --servercert ssl.cert .pre ^ Keyboard redirection protocol 5900 ^^ mouse .pre # top-left x y 42454546 02010010 0000 000c 0008 0000 # bottom-right 42454546 02010010 0000 0282 0383 0000 # mouse click in the middle of screen 42454546 02010010 0001 018a 0147 0000 .pre ^^ keyboard .pre # a b c d ... down C>S 42454546 02000010 00010004 00000000 C>S 42454546 02000010 00000005 00000000 C>S 42454546 02000010 00010005 00000000 C>S 42454546 02000010 00000006 00000000 C>S 42454546 02000010 00010006 00000000 C>S 42454546 02000010 00000007 00000000 C>S 42454546 02000010 00010007 00000000 .pre |