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NetBSD Security Advisory 2004-010: Insufficient argument validation in compat code


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Date: Fri, 17 Dec 2004 16:30:29 +1100
From: NetBSD Security-Officer <security-officer@netbsd.org.>
To: [email protected]
Subject: NetBSD Security Advisory 2004-010: Insufficient argument validation in compat code


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                 NetBSD Security Advisory 2004-010

Topic: Insufficient argument validation in compat code Version: NetBSD-current: source prior to Oct 27, 2004 NetBSD 2.0: not affected NetBSD 1.6.2: affected NetBSD 1.6.1: affected NetBSD 1.6: affected NetBSD 1.5.3: affected NetBSD 1.5.2: affected NetBSD 1.5.1: affected NetBSD 1.5: affected Severity: Local Denial of Service possible Local Privilege Escalation Fixed: NetBSD-current: Oct 28, 2004 NetBSD-2.0 branch: Nov 13, 2004 (2.0 includes the fix) NetBSD-1.6 branch: Dec 17, 2004 (1.6.3 will include the fix) Abstract ======== Kernel syscall implementations must perform appropriate sanity checks on data passed from userland. The native system calls perform appropriate checks. Some of the functions in /usr/src/sys/compat/* which implement execution of foreign binaries (such as Linux, FreeBSD, IRIX, OSF1, SVR4, HPUX, and ULTRIX) used argument data in unsafe ways prior to calling the kernel syscall. This issue was reported by Evgeny Demidov. Technical Details ================= The compat subsystem, in /usr/src/sys/compat/*, allows NetBSD users to run binaries compiled for other operating systems which run on the same CPU architecture as the NetBSD host. Typically, the foreign OS supports a set of system calls which are very similar to NetBSD's. Native instructions do not need to be translated, but calls to the operating system do. A binary's native OS is determined at exec() time. The kernel maps the syscall table for the native OS so that each syscall is delivered to a foreign OS -> NetBSD translation function, if needed. These translation functions reorder arguments, reformat them, perform mapping of constants (such as signal(3) IDs) and call the appropriate native NetBSD system call to service the application's needs. Some of the translation functions performed unsafe operations using the syscall arguments, and were exploitable to cause kernel traps. Some of the flaws may be exploitable and result in privilege escalation. All of these attacks require local access to the system. A system with only trusted user accounts is not immediately at risk. A system running a custom kernel with all 'options COMPAT_' commented out is not at risk. See also Evgeny Demidov's advisory: http://gleg.net/advisory_netbsd2.shtml Solutions and Workarounds
The NetBSD 2.0 release already includes the fixes for this vulnerability. Since the NetBSD-1-5 branch has reached End of Life, updating to NetBSD-1-6 or NetBSD-2-0 is recommended. netbsd-1-6, netbsd-2-0 (pre-release), netbsd-current:
  • Patching from sources: The fix for this issue is contained in changes to several files, all within the subdirectory: sys/compat The following instructions describe how to upgrade your kernel binaries by updating your source tree and rebuilding and installing a new version of the kernel. In these instructions, replace: BRANCH with the appropriate CVS branch (netbsd-1-6, netbsd-2-0, HEAD) ARCH with your architecture (from uname -m), and KERNCONF with the name of your kernel configuration file. To update from CVS, re-build and re-install the kernel: # cd src # cvs update -d -P -r BRANCH sys/compat # cd sys/arch/ARCH/conf # config KERNCONF # cd ../compile/KERNCONF # make depend; make # mv /netbsd /netbsd.old # cp netbsd / # shutdown -fr now Thanks To ========= Evgeny Demidov for notification, review of patches, and considerable patience. Christos Zoulas, David Maxwell, and Simon Burge for patches and review. Revision History ================ 2004-12-16 Initial release More Information ================ Advisories may be updated as new information becomes available. The most recent version of this advisory (PGP signed) can be found at ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/security/advisories/NetBSD-SA2004-010.txt.asc Information about NetBSD and NetBSD security can be found at http://www.NetBSD.org/ and http://www.NetBSD.org/Security/. Copyright 2004, The NetBSD Foundation, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Redistribution permitted only in full, unmodified form. $NetBSD: NetBSD-SA2004-010.txt,v 1.3 2004/12/16 16:12:27 david Exp $ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (NetBSD) iQCVAwUBQcG0RT5Ru2/4N2IFAQGEsAQAolCepbv3R/7v5AEpv2o6yuULRnSIqpzR efeKgmi/pSx3Nqxyb1SnW7C7gdvhIzqrhwZV0Hw/iiWo/A7SSQ8+Oht7wdADT1PO YOBLu3+7zwBsY4Hgh/v5e6khzTqLrMzUg52G2ulrUAjrrCKIZwO3J0YKEEkeO/7q 43+wG6nEH9M= =KnM+ -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----

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