______________________________________________________________________________
SuSE Security Announcement
Package: xli/xloadimage
Announcement-ID: SuSE-SA:2001:024
Date: Tuesday, July 24th 2001 17:30 MEST
Affected SuSE versions: (6.0, 6.1, 6.2,) 6.3, 6.4, 7.0, 7.1, 7.2
Vulnerability Type: remote system compromise
Severity (1-10): 3
SuSE default package: no
Other affected systems: yes
Content of this advisory:
1) security vulnerability resolved: xli
problem description, discussion, solution and upgrade information
2) pending vulnerabilities, solutions, workarounds
3) standard appendix (further information)
______________________________________________________________________________
1) problem description, brief discussion, solution, upgrade information
xli, aka xloadimage, a image viewer for X11 is used by Netscape's plugger
to display TIFF-, PNG- and Sun-Raster-images. The plugger configuration
file is /etc/pluggerrc.
Due to missing boundary checks in the xli code a buffer overflow could be
triggered by an external attacker to execute commands on the victim's
system. An exploit is publically available.
SuSE Linux is not vulnerable by default because of the different names.
On SuSE Linux the command is called xli, while the plugger uses xloadimage.
/etc/pluggerrc:
exits: xloadimage -quiet -windowid $window $file
If you have xloadimage installed on your system on your own, you should
comment out the lines in /etc/pluggerrc, that contain xloadimage, for
a temporary fix.
Otherwise update the packages for your system.
Nevertheless, it's recommended to leave the xloadimage entry in
/etc/pluggerrc commented out, because of the potential risk the
xloadimage code causes.
i386 Intel Platform:
SuSE-7.2
d35b3ee5b02bfb1bf4f9d8ccefdfa889
source rpm:
56b928a28cb32cc0103bfa89e74eee05
SuSE-7.1
5216c3ebdbd327506790107a927a0c2e
source rpm:
c3ee309a35fdcf0652626f9712771523
SuSE-7.0
dffbd8a0c19d8df8141d4434107fb042
source rpm:
410666ff06b1d050fd9cd6a16b190143
SuSE-6.4
8132e176e41d403978049345941679a0
source rpm:
d40dc2e9b46b7a9818cfd73dac269758
SuSE-6.3
b7cb7b57c78d8d5b765941372d7d7559
source rpm:
f8c47e0de4bfd59b40b0271aca133e36
Sparc Platform:
SuSE-7.1
7df3b152cf2e5e89582007fbeb59ec4c
source rpm:
c110d3e3bfbc73f2a37cb91d468acd60
SuSE-7.0
62d0e49f02a6c6491f1341a6f92aa3b0
source rpm:
00201403e740d408f20e8ae77a63f77f
AXP Alpha Platform:
SuSE-7.1
fdc3bb5cd102fa3007c3fe5fb0ae999b
source rpm:
72e51e76005f216ea476ff0e2a9890ce
SuSE-7.0
ba9efef4991ebc8fda02f00395468468
source rpm:
e4d369fd4080965f9a81ba5e97934245
SuSE-6.4
2d37a2be14760c8f3f251c83e141502f
source rpm:
8abca3e1af92ccfea799c3b1da6f333e
SuSE-6.3
76f134e228a39a440c517a3dc673b250
source rpm:
88dbb49098cc0120e72b4ac4b357c1d8
PPC Power PC Platform:
SuSE-7.1
52df89afc2aef3752bc968b7e179e85b
source rpm:
00d53cae7c9d856069f720abb746c173
SuSE-7.0
065b0453669abfad9d7afd51f9712c22
source rpm:
ppc/update/7.0/zq1/xli-1.16-304.src.rpm
d536054cff521e6f62cc01ef16f910ce
SuSE-6.4
efbd1b48104f53cef252d3e40918303c
source rpm:
310f59a98f63b78d8d3f528aa85546c2
______________________________________________________________________________
2) Pending vulnerabilities in SuSE Distributions and Workarounds:
- dqs
dex@raza-mexicana.org has found an exploitable buffer overflow bug in
the dsh program from the dqs package on SuSE Linux distributions.
To workaround the problem, do "chmod -s /usr/bin/dsh" and change the
files /etc/permissions* to reflect the change. If you do not need the
dqs package, then deinstall it (rpm -e dqs).
Packages for most of the supported SuSE Linux distributions are
available at the usual location /
for download and installation/update. Do not forget to change the files
/etc/permissions* to remove the suid-bit from the dsh program. Please
note that we will not issue a dedicated security announcement for this
specific bug.
- pcp
Paul Starzetz discovered a security weakness in the setuid root program
/usr/share/pcp/bin/pmpost. The common library in pcp trusts the
environment that has been supplied by the user, regardless of privileged
execution or not. By consequence, a user can specify the configuration
file and therefore write to files owned by root. The problem is not based
on insecurely following symlinks as stated by Paul Starzetz.
The pcp package is not installed by default in SuSE Linux distributions.
We have provided update packages for the SuSE Linux distributions version
7.1 and 7.2 that remove the setuid bit from the pmpost binary. Versions
before SuSE-7.1 were not affected because the setuid bit was not set.
We thank Keith Owens and Mark Goodwin from Silicon Graphics for responding
quickly and for publishing a new version of the pcp package which will
be included in future releases of the SuSE Linux distribution. For more
information see the /usr/share/doc/packages/pcp directory of your SuSE
Linux installation after installing the update package, or go to
obtained from .
Please note that there will not be a dedicated security announcement
for this specific bug.
- fetchmail (fetchml)
New fetchmail packages are available on the ftp server. The packages
cure a buffer overflow that can be exploited by sending a victim a
specially designed email, waiting for the victim's fetchmail program
to pick up the email. We are preparing a security announcement for this
problem.
- openssh
update packages for the openssh package after (and including) SuSE-6.4
are available on our ftp servers ftp.suse.de (for <7.1) (for ftp.suse.com or>= 7.1). We are currently checking for a non-security
related irregularity in sshd's behaviour under faulty setup conditions.
- exim
SuSE Linux distributions do not contain the exim Mail Transport Agent
(See Exim Internet Mailer for details) and are therefore not susceptible
to the recently found security-related bugs.
- webmin
SuSE Linux distributions do not contain the webmin administration
web frontend (See / for details) and are therefore
not vulnerable to the recently found security-related problems in the
software.
______________________________________________________________________________
3) standard appendix: authenticity verification, additional information
- Package authenticity verification:
SuSE update packages are available on many mirror ftp servers all over
the world. While this service is being considered valuable and important
to the free and open source software community, many users wish to be
sure about the origin of the package and its content before installing
the package. There are two verification methods that can be used
independently from each other to prove the authenticity of a downloaded
file or rpm package:
1) md5sums as provided in the (cryptographically signed) announcement.
2) using the internal gpg signatures of the rpm package.
1) execute the command
md5sum
after you downloaded the file from a SuSE ftp server or its mirrors.
Then, compare the resulting md5sum with the one that is listed in the
announcement. Since the announcement containing the checksums is
cryptographically signed (usually using the key security@suse.de),
the checksums show proof of the authenticity of the package.
We disrecommend to subscribe to security lists which cause the
email message containing the announcement to be modified so that
the signature does not match after transport through the mailing
list software.
Downsides: You must be able to verify the authenticity of the
announcement in the first place. If RPM packages are being rebuilt
and a new version of a package is published on the ftp server, all
md5 sums for the files are useless.
2) 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, where is the
filename of the rpm package that you have downloaded. Of course,
package authenticity verification can only target an uninstalled rpm
package file.
Prerequisites:
a) gpg is installed
b) The package is signed using a certain key. The public part of this
key must be installed by the gpg program in the directory
~/.gnupg/ under the user's home directory who performs the
signature verification (usually root). You can import the key
that is used by SuSE in rpm packages for SuSE Linux by saving
this announcement to a file ("announcement.txt") and
running the command (do "su -" to be root):
gpg --batch; gpg < announcement.txt | gpg --import
SuSE Linux distributions version 7.1 and thereafter install the
key "build@suse.de" upon installation or upgrade, provided that
the package gpg is installed. The file containing the public key
is placed at the toplevel directory of the first CD (pubring.gpg)
and at .
- SuSE runs two security mailing lists to which any interested party may
subscribe:
suse-security@suse.com
- general/linux/SuSE security discussion.
All SuSE security announcements are sent to this list.
To subscribe, send an email to
<suse-security-subscribe@suse.com>.
suse-security-announce@suse.com
- SuSE's announce-only mailing list.
Only SuSE's security annoucements are sent to this list.
To subscribe, send an email to
<suse-security-announce-subscribe@suse.com>.
For general information or the frequently asked questions (faq)
send mail to:
<suse-security-info@suse.com> or
<suse-security-faq@suse.com> respectively.
================================================== SuSE's security contact is <security@suse.com>.
The <security@suse.com> public key is listed below.
==================================================______________________________________________________________________________
The information in this advisory may be distributed or reproduced,
provided that the advisory is not modified in any way. In particular,
it is desired that the cleartext signature shows proof of the
authenticity of the text.
SuSE GmbH makes no warranties of any kind whatsoever with respect
to the information contained in this security advisory.
7.1)