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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

__________________________________________________________

The U.S. Department of Energy
Computer Incident Advisory Capability
___ __ __ _ ___
/ | /_\ /
\___ __|__ / \ \___
__________________________________________________________

INFORMATION BULLETIN

Telnetd Vulnerability

November 3, 1995 01:00 GMT Number G-01
_______________________________________________________________________________

PROBLEM: The telnet daemon has a security hole which allows environment
variables to be passed.
PLATFORM: SGI Irix 5.3, Digital Unix, NetBSD, FreeBSD, Kerberos versions
4 and 5, Cygnus Network Security V4 95q1 Free Network Release,
Openvision's OVSecure.
DAMAGE: This problem makes it possible for a remote user to obtain root
access.
SOLUTION: Apply one of the patches provided below.
- - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VULNERABILITY Knowledge of how to exploit this vulnerability is publicly
ASSESSMENT: available.
- - -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

CIAC advises system administrators to follow the steps described
below. The following information have been extracted from the CERT
Coordination Center's Advisory CA-95:14, and full credit is given to
them. Information from their related README file has been integrated.

[Beginning of CERT extract.]

The CERT Coordination Center has been made aware of a vulnerability
with some telnet daemons. The daemons affected are those that support
RFC 1408 or RFC 1572, both titled "Telnet Environment Option," running
on systems that also support shared object libraries.

To determine if your system is potentially vulnerable, refer to the
information we have received from vendors which is summarized in
Section III below; details are in Appendix A and reproduced in the
CA-95:14.README file. Note that if you installed a version of David
Borman's telnet package that is older than October 23, 1995, your
system may be vulnerable even though it was not vulnerable as
distributed by the vendor.

If your vendor is not listed, you will need to determine if your
system may be vulnerable. First, determine if your telnet daemon is
RFC 1408/1572 compliant. One indication that it is compliant is if
your telnet(1) program supports the "environ" command or your
telnetd(8) program supports the ENVIRON or NEW-ENVIRON options. Unless
you are certain that your telnet daemon is not RFC 1408/1572
compliant, you may wish to assume it is to be safe. Second, determine
if your system supports shared libraries. To do this, consult the
ld(1) manual page. If it describes dynamic or shared objects, your
system probably supports shared object libraries. A system is
potentially vulnerable if the telnet daemon supports RFC 1408/RFC 1572
and the system supports shared object libraries.

We recommend that you follow your vendor's directions for addressing
this vulnerability. Until you can install a patch, we recommend using
the workaround in Appendix B below. If you have previously installed
David Borman's telnet package on your system, we recommend that you
obtain the current version of telnet (see Section III.C).

As we receive additional information relating to this advisory, we will
place it in:

ftp://info.cert.org/pub/cert_advisories/CA-95:14.README

We encourage you to check our README files regularly for updates on
advisories that relate to your site.

- - -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

I. Description

Some telnet daemons support RFC 1408 or RFC 1572, both titled "Telnet
Environment Option." This extension to telnet provides the ability
to transfer environment variables from one system to another. If
the remote or targeted system, the one to which the telnet is
connecting, is running an RFC 1408/RFC 1572-compliant telnet daemon
*and* the targeted system also supports shared object libraries, then
it may be possible to transfer environment variables that influence
the login program called by the telnet daemon. By influencing that
targeted system, a user may be able to bypass the normal login and
authentication scheme and may become root on that system.

Users with accounts on the targeted system can exploit this
vulnerability. Users without accounts on that system can also
exploit this vulnerability if they are first able to deposit an
altered shared object library onto the targeted system. Therefore, a
system may be vulnerable to users with and without local accounts.

Not all systems that run an RFC 1408/RFC 1572-compliant telnet daemon
and support shared object libraries are vulnerable. Some vendors have
changed the trust model such that environment variables provided by
the telnet daemon are not trusted and therefore are not used by the
login program. Section III contains a summary of information vendors
have reported as of the date of this advisory.

II. Impact

Local and remote users can become root on the targeted system.

III. Solution

The general solution to this problem is to replace the telnet daemon
with one that changes the environment given to the login program. We
recommend that you install a patch from your vendor if possible. If this
is not possible, we recommend using the workaround in Appendix B until
you can install a patch. Finally, if you have previously installed Mr.
Borman's telnet package, see Section C for how to get a new version that
fixes the vulnerability.

A. Vendor Patches

Below is a summary of the vendors listed in the current version of
the CA-95:14.README file, and the status they have provided. More
complete information, including how to obtain patches, is provided
in Appendix A of this advisory and reproduced in the README file.
We will update the README file as we receive more information from
vendors.

If your vendor's name is not on this list, please contact the
vendor directly.

REMINDER: If you installed a version of David Borman's telnet package
that is older than October 23, 1995, your system may be
vulnerable even though it was not vulnerable as distributed
by the vendor.

Vendor or Source Status
---------------- ------------
Apple Computer not vulnerable
Berkeley Software Design not vulnerable
Cray Research not vulnerable
CYGNUS cns-95q1 - vulnerable
cns-95q4 - not vulnerable
Data General not vulnerable
Digital Equipment Ultrix - not vulnerable
OSF/1 - vulnerable
FreeBSD vulnerable
Harris not vulnerable
Hewlett-Packard not vulnerable
Linux Debian - vulnerable
Red Hat - vulnerable
Slackware - appears vulnerable
MIT-distributed for Athena vulnerable
NetBSD 1.0 - vulnerable
current - not vulnerable
NEC vulnerable
Open Software Foundation OSF/1 version 1.3 not vulnerable
OpenVision OpenV*Secure 1.2 - vulnerable
SCO not vulnerable
SUN OS and Solaris not vulnerable
SGI 5.2, 5.3, 6.0.1, 6.1 - vulnerable
Sony Corp. NEWS-OS 6.x - not vulnerable

B. Workaround

Until you can install a patch from your vendor, you can use
the workaround provided in Appendix B.

C. If you have installed a previous version of Mr. Borman's
telnet package, note that he has fixed this problem in
the version available at the following location:

ftp://ftp.cray.com/src/telnet/telnet.95.10.23.NE.tar.Z

MD5 checksum 2e14879a5b0aa6dd855a17fa8a3086cf


- - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CERT Coordination Center staff thanks Eric Halil of AUSCERT, Wolfgang
Ley of DFNCERT, and Sam Hartman of the MIT Kerberos Development team for
their support in responding to this problem.
- - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

.............................................................................
Appendix A: Vendor Information
Current as of November 1, 1995
See CA-95.14.README for updated information

Below is information we have received from vendors. If you do not see your
vendor's name below, contact the vendor directly for information.

Apple Computer, Inc.
- - --------------------
Apple's A/UX is not vulnerable.

Berkeley Software Design, Inc.
- - -----------------------------
BSDI's BSD/OS is not vulnerable.

Cray Research, Inc.
- - -------------------
Cray's UNICOS is not vulnerable.

CYGNUS Network Security V4 Free Network Release
- - ----------------------------------------------------
cns-95q1 is vulnerable. cns-95q4 is not vulnerable.

Customers can use the following URL to obtain the patch:

http://www.cygnus.com/data/cns/telnetdpatch.html

If customers are unable to obtain the patch in this manner
or have any questions, send e-mail to kerbask@cygnus.com/

Note that while the URL and patch are already available, there
is no link to the page yet. We will add a link once the
announcement has been made.

Data General Corporation
- - ------------------------
Data General believes the DG/UX operating system to be
NOT vulnerable to this problem. This includes all supported
releases, DG/UX 5.4 Release 3.00, DG/UX 5.4 Release 3.10,
DG/UX Release 4.10 and all related Trusted DG/UX releases.

Specifically, telnetd shipped in DG/UX does not support
environment options and does not support RFC 1572.

Digital Equipment Corporation
- - -----------------------------
Digital's OSF/1: vulnerable
Digital's ULTRIX: not vulnerable

Digital has corrected this potential vulnerability. Patches containing
new images for Digital's OSF/1 platforms are being provided to your
normal Digital Support channels beginning October 31 (U.S. time). The
kits may be identified as ECO SSRT0367 (telnetd) for DEC OSF/1 V2.0
thru V3.2c

This potential vulnerability is not present on Digital's ULTRIX systems.

Digital distribution of this announcement will be via AES services (DIA,
DSNlink FLASH etc.). Digital Equipment Corporation strongly urges Customers
to upgrade to a minimum of DEC OSF/1 V3.0, then apply this patch.

FreeBSD
- - -------
Vulnerable. A patch has been applied to the current development FreeBSD
source tree which is not yet released. This patch is slightly modified
compared to posted one, i.e. only variables which affects FreeBSD are
disabled. It is telnetd patch, not a login wrapper.

For the official patch, location please contact:

Jordan Hubbard <jkh@FreeBSD.org>

Harris
- - ------
Harris Computer Systems Corporation's Night Hawk is not vulnerable.

Hewlett-Packard Company
- - -----------------------
HP/UX is not vulnerable.

Linux (freely available software; not a vendor)
- - -----
Debian GNU/Linux (From "Peter Tobias" <tobias@et-inf.fho-emden.de>):
The current version of the Debian GNU/Linux distribution (released 10/27/95)
is not vulnerable anymore. All Debian Installations that use a netstd
package version prior to v1.21-1 are vulnerable (telnetd is part of
the netstd package). netstd-1.21-1 and above are ok.

Patches are available. Peter fixed the bug last week and uploaded the
fixed version to our ftp site (ftp.debian.org). Binaries, sources and
the diffs against the bsd telnetd can be found there. The URL for the
new binary package is:

ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian/debian-0.93/binary/net/netstd-1.21-1.deb

and the sources and the diff against the bsd telnetd can be found at:

ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian/debian-0.93/source/net/netstd-1.21-1/telnetd.tar.gz
ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian/debian-0.93/source/net/netstd-1.21-1/telnetd.diff.gz

Red Hat Linux (From Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com>):
Vulnerable. A fix is now available at:

ftp://ftp.redhat.com/pub/redhat-2.0/updates/NetKit-B-0.06-4.i386.rpm
ftp://ftp.pht.com/pub/linux/redhat/redhat-2.0/updates/NetKit-B-0.06-4.i386.rpm

It will also be fixed in the upcoming Red Hat 2.1 release.

Slackware Linux (Alan Cox <alan@cymru.net>):
The telnetd distributed with Slackware Linux appears to be vulnerable,
although it has not been verified.

MIT-distributed Athena telnet/telnet95
- - --------------------------------------
Vulnerable. Patches available in:
ftp://aeneas.mit.edu/pub/kerberos/telnet-patch/

beta4-3.patch is the patch versus the Beta 4 patchlevel 3 distribution
of Kerberos v5.

beta5.patch is the patch versus the Beta 5 distribution of Kerberos V5.

Both patches have been PGP signed by Ted Ts'o <tytso@MIT.EDU> using
detached signatures (beta4-3.patch.sig and beta5.patch.sig).

NetBSD
- - ------
NetBSD 1.0 (the last official release) is vulnerable; NetBSD 1.1 (due
out in mid-November) will not be. NetBSD-current is not vulnerable,
as of a week or so ago.

Patches: A source form patch has been developed. A core team member will
have to make source and binary patches available and provide a location for
it.

The login-wrapper given in the advisory can be compiled with NetBSD with:
cc -static -o login-wrapper login-wrapper.c

NEC Corporation
- - ---------------
Some NEC systems are vulnerable. Here is their vulnerability matrix:

OS Version Status
- - ------------------ ------------ -------------------------------------
EWS-UX/V(Rel4.0) R1.x - R6.x not vulnerable

EWS-UX/V(Rel4.2) R7.x - R10.x not vulnerable

EWS-UX/V(Rel4.2MP) R10.x vulnerable
patch available by the end of Nov, 1995

UP-UX/V R2.x - R4.x not vulnerable

UP-UX/V(Rel4.2MP) R5.x - R7.x vulnerable
patch available by the end of Nov, 1995

UX/4800 R11.x vulnerable
patch available by the end of Nov, 1995
- - --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contacts for further information:
E-mail:UX48-security-support@nec.co.jp

Open Software Foundation
- - ------------------------
OSF/1 version 1.3 is not vulnerable.

OpenVision
- - ----------
This is from: Barry Jaspan <bjaspan@cam.ov.com>:
OpenVision has a patch for the telnetd in OpenV*Secure 1.2 and will
contact its customers directly.

SCO
- - ---
Not vulnerable.

Silicon Graphics
- - ----------------
IRIX 5.2, 5.3, 6.0.1, and 6.1 are vulnerable.

SGI acknowledges the telnetd vulnerability reported by MIT and is
currently investigating. No further information is available at
this time.

As further information becomes available, additional advisories will be
issued.

SGI Security Information/Contacts:

For obtaining security information, patches or assistance, please
contact your SGI support provider.

If there are questions about this document, email can be sent to
cse-security-alert@csd.sgi.com .

For reporting *NEW* SGI security issues, email can be sent to
security-alert@sgi.com.

Sony Corporation
- - ----------------
Sony's NEWS-OS 6.x is not vulnerable.

SUN OS and Solaris
- - ----------------
Not vulnerable.



.............................................................................
Appendix B: login-wrapper Workaround

The login-wrapper program shown below is meant to be executed just before
the distributed login program. The wrapper cleans specific variables from
the environment before invoking the distributed login program.

- - ------------------------cut here--8<------------------------
/*
* This is a login wrapper that removes all instances of
* various variables from the environment.
*
* Note: this program must be compiled statically to be
* effective against exploitation.
*
* Author: Lawrence R. Rogers
*
* 10/25/95 version 1.1 Original version
* 10/26/95 version 1.2 ELF_ variables removed (Linux)
* 10/27/95 version 1.3 ELF_ changed to ELF_LD_
* Added AOUT_LD_ (Linux)
*
*/

#include <stdio.h>

#if !defined(_PATH_LOGIN)
# define _PATH_LOGIN "/bin/login.real"
#endif

main (argc, argv, envp)
int argc;
char **argv, **envp;
{
register char **p1, **p2;

for (p1 = p2 = envp; *p1; p1++) {
if (strncmp(*p1, "LD_", 3) != 0 &&
strncmp(*p1, "_RLD", 4) != 0 &&
strncmp(*p1, "LIBPATH=", 8) != 0 &&
strncmp(*p1, "ELF_LD_", 7) != 0 &&
strncmp(*p1, "AOUT_LD_", 8) != 0 &&
strncmp(*p1, "IFS=", 4) != 0 ) {
*p2++ = *p1;
}
}
*p2 = 0;
execve(_PATH_LOGIN, argv, envp);
perror(_PATH_LOGIN);
exit(1);
}
- - ------------------------cut here--8<------------------------

The following two examples show how to compile the login-wrapper for SGI's
IRIX 5.3 and FreeBSD 2.x systems. The examples move the distributed login
program to a new location and install the wrapper in the standard location.
When executed, the wrapper first cleanses the environment and then calls
the relocated, distributed login program.

Note 1: The wrapper must be compiled statically. On SGI's IRIX system,
compiling statically requires that the non-shared versions of libraries
be installed. Consult your system documentation to determine how to do
this.

Note 2: You may need to change the _PATH_LOGIN variable to define where
the real login program resides on your system. On some systems, login
resides in /usr/bin/login.

Compiling for IRIX 5.3
- - ----------------------
# uname -a
IRIX test 5.3 11091812 IP22 mips
# /bin/ls -l /usr/lib/iaf/scheme
- - -rwsr-xr-x 1 root sys 65832 Sep 9 14:24 /usr/lib/iaf/scheme
# /bin/cc -non_shared -O -D_PATH_LOGIN=\"/usr/lib/iaf/scheme.real\" \
login-wrapper.c -o login-wrapper
# /bin/mv /usr/lib/iaf/scheme /usr/lib/iaf/scheme.real
# /bin/chmod 755 /usr/lib/iaf/scheme.real
# /bin/mv login-wrapper /usr/lib/iaf/scheme
# /bin/chmod 4755 /usr/lib/iaf/scheme
# /bin/chown root /usr/lib/iaf/scheme
# /bin/chgrp sys /usr/lib/iaf/scheme
# /bin/ls -lL /usr/lib/iaf/scheme /usr/lib/iaf/scheme.real
- - -rwxr-xr-x 1 root sys 65832 Sep 9 14:24 /usr/lib/iaf/scheme.real
- - -rwsr-xr-x 1 root sys 213568 Oct 30 08:42 /usr/lib/iaf/scheme

Compiling for FreeBSD 2.x
- - -------------------------
# /bin/ls -lg /usr/bin/login
- - -r-sr-xr-x 1 root bin 20480 Jun 10 20:00 /usr/bin/login
# /usr/bin/cc -D_PATH_LOGIN=\"/usr/bin/login.real\" -static \
-O login-wrapper.c -o login-wrapper
# /bin/mv /usr/bin/login /usr/bin/login.real
# /bin/chmod 555 /usr/bin/login.real
# /bin/mv login-wrapper /usr/bin/login
# /bin/chmod 4555 /usr/bin/login
# /usr/sbin/chown root.bin /usr/bin/login
# /bin/ls -lg /usr/bin/login /usr/bin/login.real
- - -r-sr-xr-x 1 root bin 24885 Oct 25 22:14 /usr/bin/login
- - -r-xr-xr-x 1 root bin 20480 Jun 10 20:00 /usr/bin/login.real

[End of CERT extract.]

_______________________________________________________________________________

CIAC wishes to acknowledge the contributions of the CERT Coordination
Center for their timely and thorough advisory.
_______________________________________________________________________________


CIAC, the Computer Incident Advisory Capability, is the computer
security incident response team for the U.S. Department of
Energy. CIAC is located at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
in Livermore, California. CIAC is also a founding member of FIRST, the
Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams, a global organization
established to foster cooperation and coordination among computer
security teams worldwide.

CIAC services are available to DOE and DOE contractors, and CIAC can be
contacted at:
Voice: +1 510-422-8193
FAX: +1 510-423-8002
STU-III: +1 510-423-2604
E-mail: ciac@llnl.gov

For emergencies and off-hour assistance, DOE and DOE contractor sites may
contact CIAC 24-hours a day. During off hours (5PM - 8AM PST), call the CIAC
voice number 510-422-8193 and leave a message, or call 800-759-7243
(800-SKY-PAGE) to send a Sky Page. CIAC has two Sky Page PIN numbers, the
primary PIN number, 8550070, is for the CIAC duty person, and the secondary
PIN number, 8550074 is for the CIAC Project Leader.

Previous CIAC notices, anti-virus software, and other information are
available from the CIAC Computer Security Archive.

World Wide Web: http://ciac.llnl.gov/
Anonymous FTP: ciac.llnl.gov (128.115.19.53)
Modem access: +1 (510) 423-4753 (14.4K baud)
+1 (510) 423-3331 (9600 baud)

CIAC has several self-subscribing mailing lists for electronic publications:
1. CIAC-BULLETIN for Advisories, highest priority - time critical information
and Bulletins, important computer security information;
2. CIAC-NOTES for Notes, a collection of computer security articles;
3. SPI-ANNOUNCE for official news about Security Profile Inspector (SPI)
software updates, new features, distribution and availability;
4. SPI-NOTES, for discussion of problems and solutions regarding the use of
SPI products.

Our mailing lists are managed by a public domain software package called
ListProcessor, which ignores E-mail header subject lines. To subscribe (add
yourself) to one of our mailing lists, send the following request as the
E-mail message body, substituting CIAC-BULLETIN, CIAC-NOTES, SPI-ANNOUNCE or
SPI-NOTES for list-name and valid information for LastName FirstName and
PhoneNumber when sending

E-mail to ciac-listproc@llnl.gov:
subscribe list-name LastName, FirstName PhoneNumber
e.g., subscribe ciac-notes OUHara, Scarlett W. 404-555-1212 x36

You will receive an acknowledgment containing address, initial PIN, and
information on how to change either of them, cancel your subscription, or
get help.

PLEASE NOTE: Many users outside of the DOE and ESnet computing communities
receive CIAC bulletins. If you are not part of these communities, please
contact your agency's response team to report incidents. Your agency's team
will coordinate with CIAC. The Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams
(FIRST) is a world-wide organization. A list of FIRST member organizations and
their constituencies can be obtained by sending email to docserver@first.org
with an empty subject line and a message body containing the line: send
first-contacts.

This document was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the
United States Government. Neither the United States Government nor the
University of California nor any of their employees, makes any warranty,
express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the
accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product,
or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately
owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial products, process,
or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not
necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation or favoring by
the United States Government or the University of California. The views and
opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those
of the United States Government or the University of California, and shall not
be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes.


LAST 10 CIAC BULLETINS ISSUED (Previous bulletins available from CIAC)

(F-19) Protecting HP-UX Systems Against SATAN
(F-20) Security Administrator Tool for Analyzing Networks (SATAN)
(F-21) Protecting SUN OS Systems Against SATAN
(F-22) SATAN Password Disclosure
(F-23) Protecting IBM AIX Systems Against SATAN
(F-24) Protecting SGI IRIX Systems Against SATAN
(F-25) Cisco IOS Router Software Vulnerability
(F-26) OSF/DCE Security Hole
(F-27) Incorrect Permissions on /tmp
(F-28) Vulnerability in SunOS 4.1.* Sendmail (-oR option)


RECENT CIAC NOTES ISSUED (Previous Notes available from CIAC)

Notes 07 - 3/29/95
A comprehensive review of SATAN

Notes 08 - 4/4/95
A Courtney update

Notes 09 - 4/24/95
More on the "Good Times" virus urban legend

Notes 10 - 6/16/95
Discusses the PKZ300B Trojan, Logdaemon/FreeBSD vulnerability
in S/Key, EBOLA Virus Hoax, and Caibua Virus

Notes 11 - 7/31/95
Features include a Virus Update, Hats Off to Administrators,
America On-Line Virus Scare, SPI 3.2.2 Released, The Die_Hard Virus

Notes 12 - 9/12/95
Features include discussions on securely configuring Public
Telnet Services, X Windows and announces the beta release of Merlin,
describes the Microsoft Word Macro Viruses, and examines allegations
of Inappropriate Data Collection in Win95


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