Shawn the R0ck - Mar 20

CVE-2013-1663[1] is a possible remote DOS attack issue. This issue has
been fixed[2] in >=GNUTLS-3.0.14. I hacked on it for hours and figure out
a few prerequisites could make it vulnerable:

============================= 
REQUIRED:

 - prior to GNUTLS 3.0.14
 - crafted certificate

=============================
Attacking SCENES 

 - a client import a crafted cert file for sending req to server( CA?)

 - a "server" import a crafted cert file for sending req to other
   server( CA?)

---> With high frequency uses above manipulations

Stand on the client side, the attacker should try to construct a 
crafted certificate for triggering the below function fails:

ret = gnutls_pubkey_import_x509(pcert->pubkey, crt, 0);
  if (ret < 0)
    {
      gnutls_pubkey_deinit(pcert->pubkey); 
      /* pcert->pubkey should be NULL now */
      ret = gnutls_assert_val(ret);
      goto cleanup;
    }

I made up two crafted cert files( client.pem, client2.pem) seems would
trigger the double free issue in client's side.

Warning: Don't try it on your host machine because it would cost too
much memory then makes your machine very slow.

shawn@sl13:~/gnutls_compile_uses/CVE-2012-1663$ ./ex-serv-x509 
processing server set to null?
Server ready. Listening to port '5556'.

shawn@sl13:~/gnutls_compile_uses/CVE-2012-1663$ ./attack.sh
................
.................
...................

Another terminal: killall client

Test platform: Slackware 13.37 + GNUTLS-3.0.13

[1] http://web.nvd.nist.gov/view/vuln/detail?vulnId=CVE-2012-1663

[2] Upstream fix
http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=gnutls.git;a=commitdiff;h=9c62f4feb2bdd6fbbb06eb0c60bfdea80d21bbb8
