From ciac@tholia.llnl.gov Thu Apr 30 20:09:01 1998 From: CIAC Mail User To: ciac-bulletin@tholia.llnl.gov Date: Wed, 29 Apr 1998 13:38:48 -0700 (PDT) Subject: CIAC Bulletin I-046: Open Group xterm and Xaw Library Vulnerabilities [ For Public Release ] -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- __________________________________________________________ The U.S. Department of Energy Computer Incident Advisory Capability ___ __ __ _ ___ / | /_\ / \___ __|__ / \ \___ __________________________________________________________ INFORMATION BULLETIN Open Group xterm and Xaw Library Vulnerabilities April 28, 1998 16:00 GMT Number I-046 ______________________________________________________________________________ PROBLEM: Vulnerabilities exist in the terminal emulator xterm(1) and the Xaw library. PLATFORM: In various MIT X Consortium and The Open Group X Project Team releases. DAMAGE: If exploited, these vulnerabilities may allow an intruder root access. SOLUTION: Apply patches or workaround. ______________________________________________________________________________ VULNERABILITY The Open Group X Project Team HIGHLY recommends that the ASSESSMENT: information below be acted upon as soon as possible. ______________________________________________________________________________ [ Start The Open Group Advisory ] =======================FORWARDED TEXT STARTS HERE============================ ______________________________________________________________________________ The Open Group X Project Team Security Advisory Title: xterm and Xaw library vulnerability Date: April 27, 1998 ______________________________________________________________________________ The Open Group X Project Team provides this information freely to the X11 user community for its consideration, interpretation, implementation and use. The Open Group X Project Team recommends that this information be acted upon as soon as possible. The Open Group X Project Team provides the information in this Security Advisory on an "AS-IS" basis only, and disclaims all warranties with respect thereto, express, implied or otherwise, including, without limitation, any warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. In no event shall The Open Group be liable for any loss of profits, loss of business, loss of data or for any indirect, special, exemplary, incidental or consequential damages of any kind arising from your use of, failure to use or improper use of any of the instructions or information in this Security Advisory. ______________________________________________________________________________ I. Description Vulnerabilities exist in the terminal emulator xterm(1), and the Xaw library distributed in various MIT X Consortium; X Consortium, Inc.; and The Open Group X Project Team releases. These vulnerabilities may be exploited by an intruder to gain root access. The resources and the releases affected by the xterm vulnerability are: Resources inputMethod preeditType *Keymap Release X11R3 NO NO YES X11R4 NO NO YES X11R5 NO NO YES X11R6 NO NO YES X11R6.1 YES YES YES X11R6.2 YES YES YES X11R6.3 YES YES YES X11R6.4 YES YES YES The resources and the releases affected by the Xaw library vulnerability are Resources inputMethod preeditType Release X11R6 YES YES X11R6.1 YES YES X11R6.2 YES YES X11R6.3 YES YES X11R6.4 YES YES (X11R6.2 was not released to the public.) The Open Group X Project Team has investigated the issue and recommends the following steps for neutralizing the exposure. It is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED that these measures be implemented on ALL vulnerable systems. This issue will be corrected in future X Project Team releases of X11. - ----------------- - ------ Impact --- - ----------------- By crafting an arbitrarily long string that contains embedded machine code and using it to set specific "resources", a user may obtain a shell prompt that has root privileges. Anyone using the MIT X Consortium; X Consortium, Inc.; or X Project Team xterm and that has xterm installed setuid-root may be vulnerable. Anyone using an xterm based on any of the sources listed above may also be vulnerable to the xterm vulnerability. In order to be vulnerable to the Xaw library vulnerability, the Xaw Text widget must be used by a setuid-root program. Anyone using an Xaw replacement based on any of the released versions of Xaw listed above (e.g. Xaw3d) may also be vulnerable to the Xaw vulnerability. - ----------------------------- - ------ Temporary Solution --- - ----------------------------- 1) Become the root user on the system. % /bin/su - Password: # 2) Remove the setuid-root bit from the xterm binary. # chmod 0755 /xterm For the Xaw vulnerability, remove the suid-root bit from any programs which use the Xaw text widget. 2) Remove the setuid-root bit from the binary. # chmod 0755 - ------------------- - ------ Solution --- - ------------------- Patches to address this vulnerability have been given to X Project Team members: Astec Attachmate BARCO Chromatics CliniComp International Digital Hewlett-Packard Hitachi Hummingbird Communications IBM Jupiter Systems Metro Link Network Computing Devices NetManage Peritek Seaweed Systems Sequent Computer Systems Shiman Associates Silicon Graphics Societe Axel Siemens Nixdorf Starnet SunSoft WRQ Xi Graphics The X Project Team periodically makes public patches available to fix a variety of problems. Announcements about the availability of these patches is announced on the Usenet comp.windows.x.announce newsgroup. The patches, when they become available, may be found on ftp://ftp.x.org/pub/R6.4/fixes/. The X Project Team only supplies patches for the latest release -- we do not make patches for prior releases. Information on joining The Open Group can be found at http://www.opengroup.org/howtojoin.htm ========================FORWARDED TEXT ENDS HERE============================= [ End The Open Group Advisory ] ______________________________________________________________________________ CIAC wishes to acknowledge the contributions of CERT and The Open Group for the information contained in this bulletin. ______________________________________________________________________________ CIAC, the Computer Incident Advisory Capability, is the computer security incident response team for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and the emergency backup response team for the National Institutes of Health (NIH). 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. 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