what you don't know can hurt you
Home Files News &[SERVICES_TAB]About Contact Add New

FreeBSD Security Advisory - mmap Privilege Escalation

FreeBSD Security Advisory - mmap Privilege Escalation
Posted Jun 18, 2013
Site security.freebsd.org

FreeBSD Security Advisory - Due to insufficient permission checks in the virtual memory system, a tracing process (such as a debugger) may be able to modify portions of the traced process's address space to which the traced process itself does not have write access. This error can be exploited to allow unauthorized modification of an arbitrary file to which the attacker has read access, but not write access. Depending on the file and the nature of the modifications, this can result in privilege escalation. To exploit this vulnerability, an attacker must be able to run arbitrary code with user privileges on the target system.

tags | advisory, arbitrary
systems | freebsd
advisories | CVE-2013-2171
SHA-256 | 46c9d0684ffdd8c4787e60e14015a9e757b66b443d2622296e77fbdbc855860a

FreeBSD Security Advisory - mmap Privilege Escalation

Change Mirror Download
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

=============================================================================
FreeBSD-SA-13:06.mmap Security Advisory
The FreeBSD Project

Topic: Privilege escalation via mmap

Category: core
Module: kernel
Announced: 2013-06-18
Credits: Konstantin Belousov
Alan Cox
Affects: FreeBSD 9.0 and later
Corrected: 2013-06-18 09:04:19 UTC (stable/9, 9.1-STABLE)
2013-06-18 09:05:51 UTC (releng/9.1, 9.1-RELEASE-p4)
CVE Name: CVE-2013-2171

For general information regarding FreeBSD Security Advisories,
including descriptions of the fields above, security branches, and the
following sections, please visit <URL:http://security.FreeBSD.org/>.

I. Background

The FreeBSD virtual memory system allows files to be memory-mapped.
All or parts of a file can be made available to a process via its
address space. The process can then access the file using memory
operations rather than filesystem I/O calls.

The ptrace(2) system call provides tracing and debugging facilities by
allowing one process (the tracing process) to watch and control
another (the traced process).

II. Problem Description

Due to insufficient permission checks in the virtual memory system, a
tracing process (such as a debugger) may be able to modify portions of
the traced process's address space to which the traced process itself
does not have write access.

III. Impact

This error can be exploited to allow unauthorized modification of an
arbitrary file to which the attacker has read access, but not write
access. Depending on the file and the nature of the modifications,
this can result in privilege escalation.

To exploit this vulnerability, an attacker must be able to run
arbitrary code with user privileges on the target system.

IV. Workaround

No workaround is available.

V. Solution

Perform one of the following:

1) Upgrade your vulnerable system to a supported FreeBSD stable or
release / security branch (releng) dated after the correction date.

2) To update your vulnerable system via a source code patch:

The following patches have been verified to apply to the applicable
FreeBSD release branches.

a) Download the relevant patch from the location below, and verify the
detached PGP signature using your PGP utility.

# fetch http://security.FreeBSD.org/patches/SA-13:06/mmap.patch
# fetch http://security.FreeBSD.org/patches/SA-13:06/mmap.patch.asc
# gpg --verify mmap.patch.asc

b) Apply the patch.

# cd /usr/src
# patch < /path/to/patch

c) Recompile your kernel as described in
<URL:http://www.FreeBSD.org/handbook/kernelconfig.html> and reboot the
system.

3) To update your vulnerable system via a binary patch:

Systems running a RELEASE version of FreeBSD on the i386 or amd64
platforms can be updated via the freebsd-update(8) utility:

# freebsd-update fetch
# freebsd-update install

VI. Correction details

The following list contains the correction revision numbers for each
affected branch.

Branch/path Revision
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
stable/9/ r251902
releng/9.1/ r251903
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------

To see which files were modified by a particular revision, run the
following command, replacing XXXXXX with the revision number, on a
machine with Subversion installed:

# svn diff -cXXXXXX --summarize svn://svn.freebsd.org/base

Or visit the following URL, replacing XXXXXX with the revision number:

<URL:http://svnweb.freebsd.org/base?view=revision&revision=XXXXXX>

VII. References

<other info on vulnerability>

<URL:http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2013-2171>

The latest revision of this advisory is available at
<URL:http://security.FreeBSD.org/advisories/FreeBSD-SA-13:06.mmap.asc>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1.4.13 (FreeBSD)

iEYEARECAAYFAlHAB+YACgkQFdaIBMps37IjFACdFSoiYO1YkcPunLh7Zw4TC6MF
X9MAnjjVWB2uEl60Rl3K4WOuJ71AVNlP
=8309
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Login or Register to add favorites

File Archive:

November 2024

  • Su
  • Mo
  • Tu
  • We
  • Th
  • Fr
  • Sa
  • 1
    Nov 1st
    30 Files
  • 2
    Nov 2nd
    0 Files
  • 3
    Nov 3rd
    0 Files
  • 4
    Nov 4th
    12 Files
  • 5
    Nov 5th
    44 Files
  • 6
    Nov 6th
    18 Files
  • 7
    Nov 7th
    9 Files
  • 8
    Nov 8th
    8 Files
  • 9
    Nov 9th
    3 Files
  • 10
    Nov 10th
    0 Files
  • 11
    Nov 11th
    14 Files
  • 12
    Nov 12th
    20 Files
  • 13
    Nov 13th
    63 Files
  • 14
    Nov 14th
    18 Files
  • 15
    Nov 15th
    8 Files
  • 16
    Nov 16th
    0 Files
  • 17
    Nov 17th
    0 Files
  • 18
    Nov 18th
    18 Files
  • 19
    Nov 19th
    7 Files
  • 20
    Nov 20th
    13 Files
  • 21
    Nov 21st
    6 Files
  • 22
    Nov 22nd
    48 Files
  • 23
    Nov 23rd
    0 Files
  • 24
    Nov 24th
    0 Files
  • 25
    Nov 25th
    60 Files
  • 26
    Nov 26th
    0 Files
  • 27
    Nov 27th
    44 Files
  • 28
    Nov 28th
    0 Files
  • 29
    Nov 29th
    0 Files
  • 30
    Nov 30th
    0 Files

Top Authors In Last 30 Days

File Tags

Systems

packet storm

© 2024 Packet Storm. All rights reserved.

Services
Security Services
Hosting By
Rokasec
close