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______________________________________________________________________________
SUSE Security Announcement
Package: kernel
Announcement ID: SUSE-SA:2010:014
Date: Wed, 03 Mar 2010 10:00:00 +0000
Affected Products: openSUSE 11.1
SLE 11 High Availability Extension
SLE 11 SERVER Unsupported Extras
SLES 11 DEBUGINFO
SLED 11
SLES 11
Vulnerability Type: potential remote privilege escalation
CVSS v2 Base Score: 9.3 (HIGH) (AV:N/AC:M/Au:N/C:C/I:C/A:C)
SUSE Default Package: yes
Cross-References: CVE-2009-3939, CVE-2009-4536, CVE-2009-4538
CVE-2010-0003, CVE-2010-0007, CVE-2010-0307
CVE-2010-0410, CVE-2010-0415, CVE-2010-0622
Content of This Advisory:
1) Security Vulnerability Resolved:
Linux kernel security update
Problem Description
2) Solution or Work-Around
3) Special Instructions and Notes
4) Package Location and Checksums
5) Pending Vulnerabilities, Solutions, and Work-Arounds:
See SUSE Security Summary Report.
6) Authenticity Verification and Additional Information
______________________________________________________________________________
1) Problem Description and Brief Discussion
The SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 and openSUSE 11.1 Kernel were updated to 2.6.27.45 fixing
various bugs and security issues.
CVE-2010-0622: The wake_futex_pi function in kernel/futex.c in the
Linux kernel before 2.6.33-rc7 does not properly handle certain unlock
operations for a Priority Inheritance (PI) futex, which allows local
users to cause a denial of service (OOPS) and possibly have unspecified
other impact via vectors involving modification of the futex value from
user space.
CVE-2010-0307: The load_elf_binary function in fs/binfmt_elf.c in the
Linux kernel before 2.6.32.8 on the x86_64 platform does not ensure that
the ELF interpreter is available before a call to the SET_PERSONALITY
macro, which allows local users to cause a denial of service (system
crash) via a 32-bit application that attempts to execute a 64-bit
application and then triggers a segmentation fault, as demonstrated by
amd64_killer, related to the flush_old_exec function.
CVE-2010-0410: Users could send/allocate arbitrary amounts of
NETLINK_CONNECTOR messages to the kernel, causing OOM condition, killing
selected processes or halting the system.
CVE-2010-0415: The do_pages_move function in mm/migrate.c in the Linux
kernel before 2.6.33-rc7 does not validate node values, which allows
local users to read arbitrary kernel memory locations, cause a denial of
service (OOPS), and possibly have unspecified other impact by specifying
a node that is not part of the kernels node set.
CVE-2010-0007: net/bridge/netfilter/ebtables.c in the ebtables module in
the netfilter framework in the Linux kernel before 2.6.33-rc4 does not
require the CAP_NET_ADMIN capability for setting or modifying rules, which
allows local users to bypass intended access restrictions and configure
arbitrary network-traffic filtering via a modified ebtables application.
CVE-2009-4536: drivers/net/e1000/e1000_main.c in the e1000 driver in the
Linux kernel 2.6.32.3 and earlier handles Ethernet frames that exceed
the MTU by processing certain trailing payload data as if it were a
complete frame, which allows remote attackers to bypass packet filters via a large packet with a crafted payload.
CVE-2009-4538: drivers/net/e1000e/netdev.c in the e1000e driver in the
Linux kernel 2.6.32.3 and earlier does not properly check the size of
an Ethernet frame that exceeds the MTU, which allows remote attackers to have an unspecified impact via crafted packets.
It is not clear if this can be used for code execution.
CVE-2010-0003: The print_fatal_signal function in kernel/signal.c
in the Linux kernel before 2.6.32.4 on the i386 platform, when
print-fatal-signals is enabled, allows local users to discover the
contents of arbitrary memory locations by jumping to an address and
then reading a log file, and might allow local users to cause a denial
of service (system slowdown or crash) by jumping to an address.
CVE-2009-3939: The poll_mode_io file for the megaraid_sas driver in the
Linux kernel 2.6.31.6 and earlier has world-writable permissions, which
allows local users to change the I/O mode of the driver by modifying
this file.
2) Solution or Work-Around
There is no known workaround, please install the update packages.
3) Special Instructions and Notes
Please reboot the machine after installing the update.
4) Package Location and Checksums
The preferred method for installing security updates is to use the YaST
Online Update (YOU) tool. YOU detects which updates are required and
automatically performs the necessary steps to verify and install them.
Alternatively, download the update packages for your distribution manually
and verify their integrity by the methods listed in Section 6 of this
announcement. Then install the packages using the command
rpm -Fhv
to apply the update, replacing with the filename of the
downloaded RPM package.
x86 Platform:
openSUSE 11.1:
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-debug-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-debug-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-debug-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-default-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-default-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-default-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-pae-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-pae-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-pae-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-source-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-syms-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-trace-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-trace-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-trace-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-vanilla-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-xen-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-xen-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/i586/kernel-xen-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.i586.rpm
Platform Independent:
openSUSE 11.1:
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/noarch/kernel-docs-2.6.3-3.13.89.noarch.rpm
Power PC Platform:
openSUSE 11.1:
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-default-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-default-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-default-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-kdump-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-ppc64-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-ppc64-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-ppc64-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-ps3-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-source-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-syms-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/ppc/kernel-vanilla-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.ppc.rpm
x86-64 Platform:
openSUSE 11.1:
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-debug-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-debug-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-debug-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-default-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-default-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-default-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-source-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-syms-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-trace-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-trace-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-trace-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-vanilla-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-xen-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-xen-base-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
http://ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/discontinued/update/11.1/rpm/x86_64/kernel-xen-extra-2.6.27.45-0.1.1.x86_64.rpm
Sources:
openSUSE 11.1:
Our maintenance customers are notified individually. The packages are
offered for installation from the maintenance web:
SLE 11 SERVER Unsupported Extras
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=80a6213807ea086d38599515c9c0b841
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=d4c907ff9b89cd0c66b9d486866f47c1
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=819f2769616dd1a69e5544f3406948e1
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=5dc7ead89276ca118ce1922fcb5a4da0
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=c7baa6186f556838c901b279f934bf50
SLES 11
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=5bc8b282021bec5a0602dd1e1fb86cc0
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=b6015de562091b64634bc48dd8f9db1a
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=e5c7588310814dc753e7fc885f8955fb
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=1cc9f9878be828ca9494ad136beab1d1
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=8de370e0ec03088da9aa16f31064b5c4
SLED 11
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=5bc8b282021bec5a0602dd1e1fb86cc0
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=8de370e0ec03088da9aa16f31064b5c4
SLE 11 High Availability Extension
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=5bc8b282021bec5a0602dd1e1fb86cc0
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=b6015de562091b64634bc48dd8f9db1a
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=e5c7588310814dc753e7fc885f8955fb
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=1cc9f9878be828ca9494ad136beab1d1
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=8de370e0ec03088da9aa16f31064b5c4
SLES 11 DEBUGINFO
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=5bc8b282021bec5a0602dd1e1fb86cc0
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=b6015de562091b64634bc48dd8f9db1a
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=e5c7588310814dc753e7fc885f8955fb
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=1cc9f9878be828ca9494ad136beab1d1
https://login.microfocus.com/nidp/app/login;set_restricted=true&keywords=8de370e0ec03088da9aa16f31064b5c4
______________________________________________________________________________
5) Pending Vulnerabilities, Solutions, and Work-Arounds:
See SUSE Security Summary Report.
______________________________________________________________________________
6) Authenticity Verification and Additional Information
- Announcement authenticity verification:
SUSE security announcements are published via mailing lists and on Web
sites. The authenticity and integrity of a SUSE security announcement is
guaranteed by a cryptographic signature in each announcement. All SUSE
security announcements are published with a valid signature.
To verify the signature of the announcement, save it as text into a file
and run the command
gpg --verify
replacing with the name of the file where you saved the
announcement. The output for a valid signature looks like:
gpg: Signature made using RSA key ID 3D25D3D9
gpg: Good signature from "SuSE Security Team "
where is replaced by the date the document was signed.
If the security team's key is not contained in your key ring, you can
import it from the first installation CD. To import the key, use the
command
gpg --import gpg-pubkey-3d25d3d9-36e12d04.asc
- Package authenticity verification:
SUSE update packages are available on many mirror FTP servers all over the
world. While this service is considered valuable and important to the free
and open source software community, the authenticity and the integrity of
a package needs to be verified to ensure that it has not been tampered
with.
The internal rpm package signatures provide an easy way to verify the
authenticity of an RPM package. Use the command
rpm -v --checksig
to verify the signature of the package, replacing with the
filename of the RPM package downloaded. The package is unmodified if it
contains a valid signature from build@suse.de with the key ID 9C800ACA.
This key is automatically imported into the RPM database (on
RPMv4-based distributions) and the gpg key ring of 'root' during
installation. You can also find it on the first installation CD and at
the end of this announcement.
- SUSE runs two security mailing lists to which any interested party may
subscribe:
opensuse-security@opensuse.org
- General Linux and SUSE security discussion.
All SUSE security announcements are sent to this list.
To subscribe, send an e-mail to
.
opensuse-security-announce@opensuse.org
- SUSE's announce-only mailing list.
Only SUSE's security announcements are sent to this list.
To subscribe, send an e-mail to
.
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