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A vulnerability discovered in Kubernetes kubectl cp command can allow malicious directory traversal attack on a targeted system

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  • 3 min read
  • 25 Jun 2019

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Last week, the Kubernetes team announced that a security issue (CVE-2019-11246) was discovered with Kubernetes kubectl cp command. According to the team this issue could lead to a directory traversal in such a way that a malicious container could replace or create files on a user’s workstation. 

This vulnerability impacts kubectl, the command line interface that is used to run commands against Kubernetes clusters. The vulnerability was discovered by Charles Holmes, from Atredis Partners as part of the ongoing Kubernetes security audit sponsored by CNCF (Cloud Native Computing Foundation).

This particular issue is a client-side defect and it requires user interaction to exploit the system. According to the post, this issue is of high severity and  the Kubernetes team encourages to upgrade kubectl to Kubernetes 1.12.9, 1.13.6, and 1.14.2 or later versions for fixing this issue. To upgrade the system, users need to follow the installation instructions from the docs.

The announcement reads, “Thanks to Maciej Szulik for the fix, to Tim Allclair for the test cases and fix review, and to the patch release managers for including the fix in their releases.”

The kubectl cp command allows copying the files between containers and user machine. For copying files from a container, Kubernetes runs tar inside the container for creating a tar archive and then copies it over the network, post which, kubectl unpacks it on the user’s machine.

In case, the tar binary in the container is malicious, it could possibly run any code and generate unexpected, malicious results. An attacker could use this to write files to any path on the user’s machine when kubectl cp is called, which is limited only by the system permissions of the local user.

The current vulnerability is quite similar to CVE-2019-1002101 which was an issue in the kubectl binary, precisely in the kubectl cp command. The attacker could exploit this vulnerability for writing files to any path on the user’s machine.

Wei Lien Dang, co-founder and vice president of product at StackRox, said, “This vulnerability stems from incomplete fixes for a previously disclosed vulnerability (CVE-2019-1002101). This vulnerability is concerning because it would allow an attacker to overwrite sensitive file paths or add files that are malicious programs, which could then be leveraged to compromise significant portions of Kubernetes environments.”

Users are advised to run kubectl version --client and in case it does not say client version 1.12.9, 1.13.6, or 1.14.2 or newer, then it means the user is running a vulnerable version which needs to be upgraded.

To know more about this news, check out the announcement.

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