plaguez security advisory n. 8 kerneld / request-route vulnerability Program: kerneld(1) , the kernel messages daemon handler request-route, a sample ppp connection script Version: all kerneld/request-route versions OS: Linux (tested on 2.0.30/Redhat 4.1 and Redhat 3.0.3) Problem: lock files, symlinks Impact: when kerneld/request-route are set up, any user can overwrite any file on the system. hello all, this week, we'll see a weird thing that should have been removed for years, but that has apparently survived in recent Linux versions. kerneld(1) is a daemon that "performs kernel action in user space" (see man page). request-route is a shell script that should launch pppd and allocate a network route 'on-the-fly' when kerneld receives a 'request-route' kernel message. It can also be configured to use other network interfaces. request-route uses a lockfile named /tmp/request-route where it writes its pid in. Unfortunatly, request-route does not check wether this lockfile already exists, will follow symlinks and will create new files mode 600... One can then create/write to any file on the affected system, regardless of permissions. An attacker would create a symlink from the /tmp/request-route file to any file on the system. He would then for example telnet to a host, resulting in a request-route kernel message. The /sbin/request-route would then be executed and would overwrite the file at the end of the symlink. Fix: ---- rm -rf /sbin/request-route that's all for this week. See you later, -plaguez ------------------------ plaguez dube0866@eurobretagne.fr http://plaguez.innu.org/ ^^^^^^^^(soon) ------------------------