Editing Vulnerabilities
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= | = Lib-PSP iplloader (PRE-IPL) = | ||
== NMI Backdoor == | == NMI Backdoor == | ||
(Found by: Mathieulh, Proxima, C+D/Prometheus, Anyone spending time reverse engineering the pre-ipl) - Earliest discovery: 4/4/2007 | |||
Introduced: Tachyon 0x00140000 Boot rom | |||
Introduced: Tachyon 0x00140000 | |||
Fixed: Never | Fixed: Never | ||
Vulnerable: Lib-PSP iplloader (all ROM Versions, 0.7.0 and newer Kbooti versions, PS Vita's PSP Bootrom) | |||
The iplloader | The Lib-PSP iplloader rom (present within tachyon's IC package) as well as Lib-PSP iplloader versions 0.7.0 and onward feature a NMI/Interrupt handler backdoor (most likely used internally for debugging purposes) in its loader part at the very first instructions of the bootrom. | ||
This backdoor allows anyone in control of the memory location address 0xBC100000 to perform a jump to an arbitrary location defined in coprocessor register $9 | This backdoor allows anyone in control of the memory location address 0xBC100000 to perform a jump to an arbitrary location defined in coprocessor register $9 | ||
If | If 0xBC100000 is not equal to 0 and coprocessor register $9 is set, Lib-PSP iplloader will jump to the address set in the register very early in the code (by the 8th instruction). If 0xBC100000 is equal to 0, coprocessor register $9 will be reset back to 0. | ||
Below are the relevant pieces of code: | Below are the relevant pieces of code: | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
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</pre> | </pre> | ||
Because both address 0xBC100000 and coprocessor register $9 are controlled by syscon, this backdoor would allow an attacker performing a hardware based attack on syscon (by either replacing syscon or performing a man in the middle data injection) to set those values and gain Lib-PSP iplloader/pre-ipl time code execution (this requires using kernel code execution to fill memory with a payload to jump to beforehand), and thus potentially dump the pre-ipl code on newer targets. | |||
== Arbitrary Load Address == | |||
(Found by: C+D/Prometheus) - Earliest discovery: 4/4/2007 | |||
Introduced: Tachyon 0x00140000 Boot rom | |||
Fixed: Never | |||
== Arbitrary | |||
Found by: C+D/Prometheus - Earliest discovery: | |||
Introduced: Tachyon 0x00140000 | |||
Fixed: | |||
Lib-PSP iplloader will not control the location at which it will load/copy the block, it will happily attempt to perform a memcpy (at a rate of 1 dword per cycle) | |||
to whatever load address is specified in the IPL header, assuming the header passes the checks (kirk1 hashes, HMAC-SHA1 (on 03g+)...) this allows to potentially write a payload at arbitrary locations. | |||
== Arbitrary Entrypoint Address == | |||
(Found by: C+D/Prometheus) - Earliest discovery: 4/4/2007 | |||
Introduced: Tachyon 0x00140000 Boot rom | |||
Fixed: Lib-PSP iplloader 2.6.0 | |||
Lib-PSP iplloader will jump to any location specified in the last IPL block's entrypoint, this allows arbitrary execution, this was used in conjunction with the kirk time attack to craft a block and gain execution from at address 0xBFD00100 in the Pandora hack, and thus allowed to craft a "valid" block in a more timely fashion. | |||
== Lib-PSP iplloader always assumes a block with the checksum 0 is the first IPL block == | |||
(Found by: C+D/Prometheus) - Earliest discovery: Q4 2006 | |||
Introduced: Tachyon 0x00140000 Boot rom | |||
Fixed: indirectly since 03g as no IPL that run on 03g and onwards have a block that uses a previous block checksum of 0 other than block0 itself. | |||
This implementation fault has been exploited to create a memory hole in VRAM that could be filled with our own payload to gain execution and dump Lib-PSP iplloader. | |||