RedHat: Stronghold: 'apache' Denial of Service vulnerability
Summary
Summary
Versions of the Apache Web server up to and including 1.3.24 contain a bugin the routines which deal with requests encoded using "chunked" encoding.A carefully crafted invalid request can cause an Apache child process tocall the memcpy() function in a way that will write past the end of itsbuffer, corrupting the stack.The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project (cve.mitre.org) hasassigned the name CAN-2002-0392 to this issue.Due to the nature of the overflow on 32-bit Unix platforms this will mostlikely cause a segmentation violation and the child will terminate. However on some 64-bit platforms and some 32-bit platforms it is likelythat it is further exploitable. This could allow arbitrary code to be runon the server as the user the Apache children are set to run as.All users of Stronghold are advised to patch or upgrade their servers
Solution
We have backported the security fix from the official Apache 1.3.26
release. The patch and instructions on how to apply it are available
from the Stronghold resource center at
Stronghold 3: Hat.com/sh3/errata-2002-118
Stronghold 4: Hat.com/sh4/errata-2002-118 Updated packages will also be made available shortly from the same URLs
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:
About
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
apache Hat.com/sh3/errata-2002-118 Hat.com/sh4/errata-2002-118 CVE -CVE-2002-0392 Copyright(c) 2000, 2001, 2002 Red Hat, Inc. `
Package List
Topic
Topic
The Apache Web server contains a security vulnerability which can be used
to launch a denial of service attack, or in some cases, allow remote code
execution.
Relevant Releases Architectures
Bugs Fixed