Mobile code: object hijack

Description
This attack consists in a technique to create objects without constructors’ methods by taking advantage of clone method of Java based applications.

Case a certain class implements cloneable method declared as public, but doesn’t has a public constructor method nor declared as final, it is possible to extent it into a new class and create objects using the clone method.

The clonable method certificates that the clone method functions correctly. A cloned object has the same attributes (variables values) that the original object, but the objects are independents.

Severity
Medium to High

Likelihood of exploitation
Medium

Examples
In this example, a public class “BankAccount” implements the clonable method which declares “Object clone(string accountnumber)”:

public class BankAccount implements Cloneable{ public Object clone(String accountnumber) throws CloneNotSupportedException {      Object returnMe = new BankAccount(account number); …     } }

An attacker can implement a malicious public class that extends the parent BankAccount class, as follows:

public class MaliciousBankAccount extends BankAccount implements Cloneable{ public Object clone(String accountnumber) throws CloneNotSupportedException {               Object returnMe = super.clone; …              } }

A Java applet from certain application is acquired and subverted by an attacker. Then, he makes the victim accepts and runs a Trojan or malicious code that was prepared to manipulate objects’ state and behavior. This code is instantiated and executed continuously using default JVM on victim’s machine. When the victim invokes the Java applet from the original application using the same JVM, then the attacker clones the class, he manipulates the attributes values and after that substitutes the original object for the malicious one.

External References
http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/491.html - Mobile Code: Object Hijack http://www.fortifysoftware.com/vulncat/ - Object Model Violation: Erroneous clone Method

Related Threats
Category: Logical Attacks

Related Attacks

 * Mobile code: invoking untrusted mobile code
 * Mobile code: non-final public field

Related Vulnerabilities
Category: Unsafe Mobile Code

Related Countermeasures
Category: Session Management