Vulnerability Exposes F5 BIG-IP to Kerberos KDC Hijacking Attacks

F5 Networks this week released patches to address an authentication bypass vulnerability affecting BIG-IP Access Policy Manager (APM), but fixes are not available for all impacted versions.


Tracked as CVE-2021-23008, the high-severity vulnerability allows for the bypass of BIG-IP APM AD (Active Directory) authentication if the attacker can hijack a Kerberos KDC (Key Distribution Center) connection using a spoofed AS-REP (Kerberos Authentication Service Response).


Authentication bypass is also possible from an AD server that the attacker has already compromised, F5 explains. The attacker could also bypass policies and gain unfettered access to sensitive workloads, according to identity protection firm Silverfort, whose researchers discovered the vulnerability.


“In some cases this can be used to bypass authentication to the Big-IP admin console as well,” the researchers say.


The Kerberos protocol leverages a client-server model for on-premise authentication, with KDC being an intermediary that holds shared secret keys and user access information. When attempting to access a resource, the KDC prompts for a username and password and also checks if the user has privileges to access that resource.


For the protocol to work, the user and the KDS authenticate to the server and the server authenticates to the client. If the Kerberos KDC authentication to the server is compromised, the attacker can hijack the connection between the client and the domain controller, thus bypassing authentication.


Such attacks typically exploit misconfigurations in Kerberos protocol implementations, and the same applies to F5 BIG-IP as well. Thus, an attacker can create a domain controller with a username identical to the admin’s username and target the flaw to aut ..

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