Red Hat 6.0 RHSA-1999:032-01 critical: amd buffer overrun exploit
New packages of am-utils are available for all Red Hat Linux platforms
Summary
Summary
Red Hat recommends anyone to upgrade to the fixed versions immediately.
Thanks to Erez Zadok, the maintainer of am-utils for his assistance in resolving this problem.
Solution
rpm -Uvh filename
where filename is the name of the RPM.
9. Verification:
MD5 sum Package NameThese packages are also PGP signed by Red Hat Inc. for security. Our key is available at:
1a1ceb0ed50822776f605e60bbed1afb alpha/am-utils-6.0.1s11-1.6.0.alpha.rpm
b68c6f2780f11ca71947673124bd8f11 sparc/am-utils-6.0.1s11-1.6.0.sparc.rpm
275997ded7f0c85efa6229963e84f668 SRPMS/am-utils-6.0.1s11-1.6.0.src.rpm
You can verify each package with the following command:
rpm --checksig filename
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 --nopgp filename
References
Package List
Topic
Topic
2. Bug IDs fixed:
4690
Relevant Releases Architectures
4. Obsoleted by:
None
5. Conflicts with:
Red Hat Linux 4.2 shipped originally with a version of amd that is no longer being maintained. Since Red Hat Linux 5.0 we have switched to am-utils. This release of am-utils has been backported to 4.2 and it will obsolete the original 4.2 amd package.
The following is valid for all releases and arcitectures: the default configuration file format for amd that Red Hat used to ship has been changed. Initially the /etc/amd.conf file used to be the default map file that would allow access to the /net hierarchy. Now /etc/amd.conf is the amd configuration file and the default map is installed as /etc/amd.net.
6. RPMs required:
Intel:
am-utils-6.0.1s11-1.6.0.i386.rpm
Alpha:
am-utils-6.0.1s11-1.6.0.alpha.rpm
SPARC:
am-utils-6.0.1s11-1.6.0.sparc.rpm
Source:
am-utils-6.0.1s11-1.6.0.src.rpm
Architecture neutral:
Bugs Fixed