BugTraq
vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 22 2004 06:45PM
Bob Kryger (bobk panix com) (2 replies)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 05:01AM
Darren Reed (avalon caligula anu edu au) (6 replies)
In some mail from Bob Kryger, sie said:
>
> During one of our security reviews the following situation was
> uncovered. What are your thoughts?
>
> Suppose a postscript printer has multiple interfaces connected to
> different networks, is there a way to leverage PostScript to create a
> vulnerability such as.
>
> 1. Allow an attacker log in to the printer and then gain access to the
> other network?
> 2. Create a postscipt program to send copies of printouts to one of the
> interfaces?
> 3. What if one of the interfaces is a JetDirect connected via a parallel
> port?
>
> It has been suggested that PostScript is very powerful and can be used
> to accomplish a number of general purpose computing tasks including
> copying data from one port to another and examining memory. Since the
> parallel interface is bidirectional what is keeping data from being send
> from the printer to the network, breaching security.
>
> My preliminary web searches do not reveal much in the way of postscript
> printer vulnerabilities.

First, remember that postscript has been designed for rendering images
on a page. It has -no- native networking comands nor ability to talk
to any peripheral. Most often, the 'general purpose' tasks have been
to do things like write a postscript program to calculate pi or things
like that. I've never heard of anyone suggesting you could copy data
from one port to another, if only because there's no such thing as an
open file in postscript. Another example might be rather than drawing
the graph and telling a printer how to draw it, with postscript, you
can write a program that you send to the printer and have it draw it.

Next, get whichever printer you are interested in to see what extensions
they have by way of postscript comments. If there is going to be any
'connect to peripheral' thing, that's where it will be.

Of course if you had a postscript printer AND a the postscript cookbooks
you'd instantly get a better understanding.

Although for those that remember, Solaris 1 came with an X server that
listened on port 2000 where you could connect and send postscript commands,
rendering directly on to the background of the screen.

All that's not to say that a postscript engine is ever perfect...I'm
sure everyone who's had a postscript printer can tell of print jobs
that have "crashed the printer". Maybe you can buffer overflow one,
but what OS are they running in there? It's not likely to be anything
you'll have libraries for and maybe not even a CPU you're familiar with.

Darren

[ reply ]
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 02:56AM
Glynn Clements (glynn clements virgin net) (1 replies)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 28 2004 04:43PM
Georg Lutz (glist gmx net)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 12:47AM
Michael Zimmermann (zim vegaa de)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 10:41PM
Nate Eldredge (nge cs hmc edu)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 07:21PM
Elizabeth Zwicky (zwicky greatcircle com) (1 replies)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 08:01PM
Darren Reed (avalon caligula anu edu au) (1 replies)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 07:21PM
Stephen Samuel (samuel bcgreen com)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 06:45PM
Jim Knoble (jmknoble pobox com)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 06:40PM
der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 04:15AM
der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA) (2 replies)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 27 2004 10:12PM
Ian Farquhar - Network Security Group (Ian Farquhar Sun COM)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 12:41AM
Michael Zimmermann (zim vegaa de) (1 replies)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 04:38AM
der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA) (1 replies)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 09:39AM
Michael Zimmermann (zim vegaa de) (1 replies)
Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 05:26PM
der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA)


 

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