Red Hat: FTP 'iptables' vulnerability
Summary
Summary
A vulnerability in iptables "RELATED" connection tracking has been discovered. When using iptables to allow FTP "RELATED" connections through the firewall, carefully constructed PORT commands can open arbitrary holes in the firewall. The iptables system is included in the 2.4 kernel series, but not in the earlier 2.2 kernel series used in Red Hat Linux 6.x and Red Hat Linux 7.0. Red Hat Linux 7.1 uses a 2.4 kernel and provides the ip_conntrack_ftp module that has this bug. However, Red Hat Linux does not currently configure iptables (the default firewall configuration uses ipchains instead), so unless you have explicitly configured iptables and enabled FTP "RELATED" connections through the firewall, you are not vulnerable to attack.
Solution
Red Hat will be releasing a kernel with this and other bugs fixed
shortly. In the meantime, we strongly recommend that users of
iptables not allow FTP "RELATED" connections.
5. Bug IDs fixed ( for more info):
6. RPMs required:
7. Verification:
MD5 sum Package Name
These packages are GPG signed by Red Hat, Inc. for security. Our key
is available at:
You can verify each package with the following command:
rpm --checksig
If you only wish to verify that each package has not been corrupted or
tampered with, examine only the md5sum with the following command:
rpm --checksig --nogpg
References
Copyright(c) 2000, 2001 Red Hat, Inc. `
Package List
Topic
Topic
A security hole has been found that does not affect the default
configuration of Red Hat Linux, but can affect some custom
configurations of Red Hat Linux 7.1 only. The bug is specific
to the Linux 2.4 kernel series.
Relevant Releases Architectures
Bugs Fixed