OpenEMR is the most popular open source software for electronic health record and medical practice management. It is used world-wide to manage sensitive patient data, including information about medications, laboratory values, and diseases. Patients use OpenEMR to schedule appointments, communicate with physicians, and pay online invoices. Specifically in these tumultuous times of an ongoing pandemic, this is highly sensitive data and protecting it is a concern for everyone, and particularly in the U.S.. Companies in America are required to protect individually identifiable and electronic health information by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).
During our security research of popular web applications, we discovered several code vulnerabilities in OpenEMR 5.0.2.1. A combination of these vulnerabilities allowed remote attackers to execute arbitrary system commands on any OpenEMR server that uses the Patient Portal component. This can lead to the compromise of sensitive patient data, or worse, to a compromise of critical infrastructure.
In this blog post we analyze the technical root cause of three vulnerabilities and demonstrate how attackers could have built a chain for exploitation. We reported all issues responsibly to the affected vendor who rated the fixes as critical and released a security patch in August immediately to protect all users.
Impact
During the analysis of OpenEMR 5.0.2.1 we found the following code vulnerabilities:
- Command Injection (admin privileges) (CVE-2020-36243)
- Persistent XSS (admin privileges) (CVE-2021-32103)
- Insecure API permissions (unauthenticated) (CVE-2021-32101)
- SQL Injection (user privileges) (CVE-2021-32102, CVE-2021-32104)
The vulnerabilities impact OpenEMR's Patient Portal that needs to be active and accessible for online patients. A remote attacker can then insert a malicious JavaScript payload (XSS) into any user account. This works even when the portal's registration feature for new users is disabled.
Depending on the privilege role of the victim, further vulnerabilities in the backend can be exploited when a victim’s browser executes the XSS payload unconsciously. For example, if the victim is an administrator, the attacker can take over the entire server via a Command Injection vulnerability that allows to execute OS system commands. Other, lower privileged user sessions can be misused to exploit SQL injection vulnerabilities that enable to steal patient data from the database.
For demonstration purposes we’ve created a short video that shows how quick and easy a server is compromised.
Technical Analysis
In the following section, we dive into three of the code vulnerabilities we found in OpenEMR. These can be combined by an attacker to gain pre-auth command execution in the Patient Portal of OpenEMR 5.0.2.1 when targeting an administrator user.
1. Command Injection Vulnerability (CVE-2020-36243)
The most critical vulnerability hides in the backend of OpenEMR. Here, administrators can use a feature to create data backups. For this purpose, different SQL queries are constructed dynamically that are later executed as system commands when creating the backup file. The following (simplified) code shows the critical code where these system commands are created depending on the operating system (OS).
interface/main/backup.php
In line 5, the values in the HTTP POST parameter form_sel_layouts
are received and used as $layoutid
variables. Then these values are concatenated into an OS command $cmd
in line 11.
As we can see here, the user-controlled input $layoutid
is sanitized with the help of the function add_escape_custom()
. This custom function is defined in the OpenEMR code base and makes use of the PHP built-in function mysqli_real_escape_string()
that is known to protect against SQL injection vulnerabilities. Finally, the concatenated OS command string is executed in line 19. At first sight, it looks like the developers carefully sanitized all user inputs.
To understand why the sanitization is not sufficient in this code we need to understand how commands are executed. When we look at the final value of the variable $cmd
in line 15, the shell command looks like the following at runtime:
Here, the variable $layoutid
contains a user-controlled value. But why does the add_escape_custom()
function not fully protect against a Command Injection vulnerability?
Let’s assume the attacker sends the following payload:
This would result in the following shell command:
As we can see, the quotes are escaped and an attacker cannot break out of the single quotes '
. A SQL injection is successfully prevented. Double quotes "
are also escaped by mysqli_real_escape_string()
and we are not breaking out of the echo
command either. However, there is another way to exploit a Command Injection vulnerability.
An attacker can send the following payload:
Note the backtick characters ``
in our payload. This would end up in the shell command like this:
The problem here is that the echo
shell command uses double quotes and thus allows to execute sub commands in Linux by using characters like backticks ``
or $()
. Once our backticks are found within the system command, our new, injected command is executed and the output result is inserted into the initial command. From here, an attacker can fully compromise the system and read sensitive data.
Patch
It is tempting to use the PHP built-in function escapeshellarg()
as a patch since it is designed to escape all malicious characters needed for a Command Injection attack. However, in this case this function would introduce a SQL injection vulnerability instead because escapeshellarg()
introduces new single quotes. These single quotes would break the SQL query and probably that is the reason why it was not used here in the first place.
As a solution to protect against both vulnerability types, it is enough to simply swap the single and double quotes.
A SQL injection vulnerability is then still prevented because the double quote "
characters are escaped. More importantly, command substitution can no longer be opened because now the argument of echo
is in single quotes '
, which don't allow sub commands.
2. Persistent Cross-Site Scripting Vulnerability (CVE-2021-32103)
So far an attacker can only trigger the Command Injection vulnerability manually if he or she logs in as an admin. With the help of another code vulnerability, the attack can be carried out with the help of a valid administrator that triggers the exploitation unknowingly. We discovered a Persistent Cross-Site Scripting vulnerability that enables this kind of attack.
The attacker’s payload is hidden within the last name of a user account. This last name can be changed in line 4 of the following code. Note that this action can only be performed by an administrator (we will come back to this in the next section).
interface/usergroup/usergroup_admin.php
The new last name is stored permanently in the database table users. At a different code location, this name is read from the database again to present it in the frontend. This happens, for example, when an administrator changes the password of the renamed user.
interface/usergroup/user_info.php
Here, in line 6, the user name is embedded into the HTML output without any sanitization.
This allows injection of malicious HTML code into the response page that will be rendered by the administrator’s browser. When <script>
tags are injected into the last name, then malicious JavaScript code can be executed that will be able to control the victim's browser and its further activities. For example, it can be used to trigger the previously introduced Command Injection vulnerability that only an administrator can execute (Cross-Site Scripting).
Patch
This vulnerability can be easily prevented by using the popular PHP function htmlspecialchars()
in line 6. It encodes special HTML characters into HTML entities (e.g. <
into <
) and thus prevents that malicious JavaScript code can be embedded into the name.
3. Insecure API Permissions (CVE-2021-32101)
So far, we have learned about a Command Injection vulnerability that can be triggered by an administrator. And we’ve learned about a persistent XSS vulnerability that can also be used to trigger the Command Injection from a victim. However, to plant the XSS payload we again need administrator privileges. As long as the administrator itself, who has access to all data anyway, is not malicious there should be no risk - right? This is true, as long as the permission system is secure.
In OpenEMR, the Patient Portal has its own API interface to control all portal actions, for example for editing a user account. This API uses the Phreeze framework as a dispatcher that forwards requests to the respective component. Before this dispatcher is executed, the authentication is verified in the following include file.
portal/patient/_machine_config.php
It creates a new session and checks in line 4 if the user is already on the portal page or whether she is currently trying to register. In this case, the authentication check is deactivated in line 6 ($ignoreAuth = true
). Otherwise, the authentication check is active and the user has to authenticate.
Let's have a look at how the registration works in the Patient Portal. In the following code you can see the simplified register.php. In lines 4-6, the interesting session variables are set that indicate that we are within a new registration process.
portal/account/register.php
No further checks are made and the session variable is not destroyed at the end of the file. An attacker could therefore make the first HTTP request to register.php which creates a session and sets the session variable $_SESSION['register']
to true. Then, without completing the registration, the attacker can access the dispatcher and bypass the authentication because $ignoreAuth
is set to true.
Once the authentication is bypassed, it is possible to use all features of the API as a registered Patient Portal user. This means an attacker can access all patient data or change the email address and passwords of the patients even if registration to the Patient Portal is closed.
Of special interest is the user controller of the API which can be used to change information of any backend user like the administrator. The attacker can now take advantage of the previously introduced Persistent XSS vulnerability by adding an XSS payload to the last name of the admin user. This XSS payload can then execute JavaScript code that exploits the Command Injection vulnerability. Ultimately, all three vulnerabilities are combined and lead to a pre-auth Command Execution in OpenEMR 5.0.2.1.
Timeline
Date | What |
24.02.2020 | We reported the vulnerabilities to the OpenEMR team |
29.04.2020 | OpenEMR team addresses the first vulnerabilities with a patch |
11.08.2020 | OpenEMR team releases another security patch |
Summary
In this blog post we analyzed three code vulnerabilities found in OpenEMR, a widely adopted open source solution for electronic health records. The combination of these vulnerabilities can lead to a complete takeover of the OpenEMR application and put patient data as well as the infrastructure at risk. We’ve evaluated the root causes in the PHP code base and described how to fix them. Due to the severity of the issues, we postponed the release of these details for several months. If you are hosting an OpenEMR instance and have not yet updated your installation, we highly recommend that you do so now. Last but not least, we would like to thank the OpenEMR team who quickly released a patch version 5.0.2.2 after our reports.
Please stay healthy and secure!
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