[CONTROL] username=victim success=False
[ATTACK] username=../../../asyncssh-proof-exploit-proof-8b2bd23daeeb.pub success=True
[ATTACK] output=AUTH_BYPASS_SUCCESS username=../../../asyncssh-proof-exploit-proof-8b2bd23daeeb.pub
PASS: traversal username authenticated with attacker-controlled authorized_keys file
Summary
AsyncSSH 2.22.0 expands the OpenSSH-compatible
AuthorizedKeysFile%utoken with the raw SSH username during pre-authentication server config reload. A server configured with a documented per-user key pattern such asAuthorizedKeysFile authorized_keys/%ucan be made to read an authorized-keys file outside the intended directory when the SSH username contains path traversal segments. If the attacker can place or reference a readable authorized-keys-format file containing their public key, the attacker can authenticate over SSH as the traversal username.Affected Product
v2.22.0, commitaf5a81e669633d83d535163f93b6bf3f957c9238c3ce72b01be4f97b40e62844dd384227e5ff5a401a3793007c42f86a5c8eb537Vulnerability Details
asyncssh/config.py,asyncssh/connection.py,asyncssh/auth_keys.py,asyncssh/misc.py)%uinAuthorizedKeysFileis expanded from the remote username without rejecting path separators or..segments, and the resulting path is opened without constraining it to the intended authorized-keys directory.Attack Preconditions
AuthorizedKeysFilecontains%u, for exampleAuthorizedKeysFile authorized_keys/%u./,\, or..before AsyncSSH uses the username for key-file selection.Reproduction
The run-scoped evidence contains a safe localhost proof:
Start the proof harness saved at
harness_app.py
Run
exploit_proof.py
through
run_proof.sh
The harness creates
sshd_configwithAuthorizedKeysFile authorized_keys/%u, writes the attacker's public key to a file outsideauthorized_keys/, starts a real AsyncSSH server, and attempts two SSH logins.Expected result: the normal username
victimfails, while the traversal username authenticates with the same attacker key.Observed proof output: