Copy Link
Add to Bookmark
Report

CERT Advisory 118

eZine's profile picture
Published in 
CERT Advisory
 · 4 years ago

  


-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

=============================================================================
CERT(sm) Advisory CA-96.13
Original issue date: July 9, 1996
Last revised: August 30, 1996
Removed references to the advisory README file.

A complete revision history is at the end of this file.

Topic: Vulnerability in the dip program
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

The CERT Coordination Center has received several reports of exploitations of
a vulnerability in the dip program on Linux systems. The dip program is
shipped with most versions of the Linux system; and versions up to and
including version 3.3.7n are vulnerable. An exploitation script for Linux
running on X86-based hardware is publicly available. Although exploitation
scripts for other architectures and operating systems have not yet been found,
we believe that they could be easily developed.

The CERT Coordination Center recommends that you disable dip and re-enable it
only after you have installed a new version. Section III below describes how
to do that.

We will update this advisory as we receive additional information.
Please check advisory files regularly for updates that relate to your site.

- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

I. Description

dip is a freely available program that is included in most distributions
of Linux. It is possible to build it for and use it on other UNIX systems.

The dip program manages the connections needed for dial-up links such
as SLIP and PPP. It can handle both incoming and outgoing connections.
To gain access to resources it needs to establish these IP connections,
the dip program must be installed as set-user-id root.

A vulnerability in dip makes it possible to overflow an internal buffer
whose value is under the control of the user of the dip program. If this
buffer is overflowed with the appropriate data, a program such as a
shell can be started. This program then runs with root permissions on the
local machine.

Exploitation scripts for dip have been found running on Linux systems for
X86 hardware. Although exploitation scripts for other architectures
and operating systems have not yet been found, we believe that they could
be easily developed.

II. Impact

On a system that has dip installed as set-user-id root, anyone with
access to an account on that system can gain root access.

III. Solution

Follow the steps in Section A to disable your currently installed version
of dip. Then, if you need the functionality that dip provides, follow the
steps given in Section B.

A. Disable the presently installed version of dip.
As root,
chmod 0755 /usr/sbin/dip

By default, dip is installed in the /usr/sbin directory. Note that it
may be installed elsewhere on your system.


B. Install a new version of dip.
If you need the functionality that dip provides, retrieve and install
the following version of the source code for dip, which fixes this
vulnerability. dip is available from

ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/Network/serial/dip/dip337o-uri.tgz
ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/Network/serial/dip/dip337o-uri.tgz.sig

MD5 (dip337o-uri.tgz) = 45fc2a9abbcb3892648933cadf7ba090
SHash (dip337o-uri.tgz) = 6e3848b9b5f9d5b308bbac104eaf858be4dc51dc


- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CERT Coordination Center staff thanks Uri Blumenthal for his solution to
the problem and Linux for their support in the development of this advisory.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

If you believe that your system has been compromised, contact the CERT
Coordination Center or your representative in the Forum of Incident
Response and Security Teams (FIRST).

We strongly urge you to encrypt any sensitive information you send by email.
The CERT Coordination Center can support a shared DES key and PGP. Contact
the CERT staff for more information.

Location of CERT PGP key
ftp://info.cert.org/pub/CERT_PGP.key

CERT Contact Information
- ------------------------
Email cert@cert.org

Phone +1 412-268-7090 (24-hour hotline)
CERT personnel answer 8:30-5:00 p.m. EST
(GMT-5)/EDT(GMT-4), and are on call for
emergencies during other hours.

Fax +1 412-268-6989

Postal address
CERT Coordination Center
Software Engineering Institute
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh PA 15213-3890
USA

CERT publications, information about FIRST representatives, and other
security-related information are available for anonymous FTP from
http://www.cert.org/
ftp://info.cert.org/pub/

CERT advisories and bulletins are also posted on the USENET newsgroup
comp.security.announce

To be added to our mailing list for CERT advisories and bulletins, send your
email address to
cert-advisory-request@cert.org


Copyright 1996 Carnegie Mellon University
This material may be reproduced and distributed without permission provided
it is used for noncommercial purposes and the copyright statement is
included.

CERT is a service mark of Carnegie Mellon University.


This file: ftp://info.cert.org/pub/cert_advisories/CA-96.13.dip_vul
http://www.cert.org
click on "CERT Advisories"


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Revision history

Aug. 30, 1996 Removed references to CA-96.13.README.




-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.2

iQCVAwUBMiTEbHVP+x0t4w7BAQE9CAQAvUU6roTvYG+pMzUiAsSKOKkzSCBgVFHr
3n90176UxogW8MDKjBoX7z3R3VXoAe2AG0zArQ5Kd4l0hYNqc7V/1LqxpaaiCL7o
epz9xp402IofSLhkCuThjzgEJjJYEihJtFNLoy1SyYEk4j5c16PIey6RcEM+Izsc
30mQPwwP+Do=
=VsOI
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----

← previous
next →
loading
sending ...
New to Neperos ? Sign Up for free
download Neperos App from Google Play
install Neperos as PWA

Let's discover also

Recent Articles

Recent Comments

Neperos cookies
This website uses cookies to store your preferences and improve the service. Cookies authorization will allow me and / or my partners to process personal data such as browsing behaviour.

By pressing OK you agree to the Terms of Service and acknowledge the Privacy Policy

By pressing REJECT you will be able to continue to use Neperos (like read articles or write comments) but some important cookies will not be set. This may affect certain features and functions of the platform.
OK
REJECT