From support@caldera.com Fri Dec 11 16:15:57 1998 From: Caldera Support To: Caldera Announce Date: 11 Dec 1998 16:33:27 -0000 Reply-To: info@caldera.com Subject: Caldera Security Advisory SA-1998.37: SUID bits on KDE Screensavers -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Subject: Caldera Security Advisory SA-1998.37: SUID bits on KDE Screensavers Topic: SUID bits on KDE Screensavers Advisory issue date: 25 November 1998 I. Problem Description KDE Screensavers are usually running SUID root. Security issues have been posted to Bugtraq on Nov 16 1998, under the subject "KDE 1.0's klock can be used to gain root priveledges". The KDE team has now published a fix for the KDE1.0 branch and the current branch. With this change, screensavers and klock are not running SUID anymore. This will solve every potential exploit, like misuse of buffer overruns to gain root rights or executing a wrong executable under SUID rights. The following text explains the technique used to solve the problem. An advisory for distributors, users and administrators follows the technical description. Technique --------- An authentification program, kcheckpass, has been introduced. This is a separate, helper program, that runs SUID and is called each time a password has to be checked. The password is passed via STDIN to the program and the result of the authentification process is returned in the return code of the program. This program is small and supposed to be free from security hazzles. Advisory -------- Administrators should remove any SUID bit from KDE executables. After updating to the fixed KDE1.0 tree or to the current KDE, administrators should: 1) check the access rights of the installed executables. The screensavers must not be installed SUID anymore. If in doubt, remove the SUID bits manually by a suitable command, like "chmod -s *.kss klock" under Linux. 2) check the access rights of the kcheckpass program. This program should only be installed SUID root under certain authentification systems, like the shadow password suite. 3) Distributions using the shadow password system can be made more secure by creating a "shadow" group and setting the access rights of /etc/shadow and kcheckpass like in the following example: -rw-r----- 1 root shadow 746 Sep 2 21:35 /etc/shadow -rwxr-sr-x 1 root shadow 4720 Nov 17 22:32 /opt/kde/bin/kcheckpass Distributors are strongly encouraged to follow this scheme. This way, the kcheckpass is running under the effective user id of the user itself and the effective group "shadow". With this, kcheckpass has only one additional right against regular users: The right to read /etc/shadow. Attackers won't be able to make wider use of "kcheckpass". Availability of the fix ----------------------- The patches are already integrated in the KDE1.0 and the KDE1.1 branches. You can use cvs/cvsup to get current sources. You can also get the patch from KDE's ftp Server ftp://ftp.kde.org and its mirrors, which you can apply against a clean KDE1.0 kdebase package. It has been uploaded under the name kdebase1.0-klock-patch and should show up soon on a suitable place on KDE's ftp Server. The precise location will be announced later, for example http://www.kde.org/news_dyn.html will provide this information as soon as it available. Christian Esken II. Impact Description: klock can be used to gain root priviledges. Vulnerable Systems: OpenLinux 1.2 & 1.3 systems using a kdebase package prior to kdebase-1.0-2. III. Solution Workaround: Correction: The proper solution is to upgrade to the kdebase-1.0-2 packages. They can be found on Caldera's FTP site at: ftp://ftp.caldera.com/pub/OpenLinux/updates/1.3/008/RPMS The corresponding source code can be found at: ftp://ftp.caldera.com/pub/OpenLinux/updates/1.3/008/SRPMS The MD5 checksums (from the "md5sum" command) for these packages are: 5bbf9ec5049207acdcf46178e140ac6c RPMS/kdebase-1.0-2.i386.rpm 05325756f0fc31a922367a0da57d6045 SRPMS/kdebase-1.0-2.src.rpm Upgrade with the following commands: rpm -q kdebase && rpm -U kdebase-1.0-2.i386.rpm For each user the ownership of the *.kssrc files must be changed. These files are most likely owned by "root.users" and hence cannot be edited by users until the system administrator (root) returns ownership to the respective user. E.g.: # chown col.users ~col/.kde/share/config/*.kssrc IV. References This and other Caldera security resources are located at: http://www.caldera.com/news/security/index.html Additional documentation on this problem can be found in: http://www.geek-girl.com/bugtraq/1998_4/0478.html http://www.geek-girl.com/bugtraq/1998_4/0503.html This security fix closes Caldera's internal Problem Report 4229. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.3i Charset: noconv iQCVAwUBNnEuZ+n+9R4958LpAQHVewP+L1E8JYzbIZbkwJGRN/AtL/QDhb9twW8q qflZTjRu34A+X/p6zAFikE3MeelSxGb9YMkOqI7W1Dxo4jsFnvQXlYSN2JWIi3pc isnYAV4w3szsIKcOZWhPNg3nYjO2loDBF1piEpoxGh70H9ogGvAYEX465G3aLBb7 KCgxjgzgC6c= =mJQd -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- - Notes: To learn how to use this list server, email a "help" command to majordomo@rim.caldera.com.