-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- __________________________________________________________ The U.S. Department of Energy Computer Incident Advisory Capability ___ __ __ _ ___ / | /_\ / \___ __|__ / \ \___ __________________________________________________________ INFORMATION BULLETIN Vulnerability in the at(1) program December 5, 1997 19:00 GMT Number H-71b ______________________________________________________________________________ PROBLEM: A buffer overflow condition exists in some implementations of the at(1) program. PLATFORM: See "Appendix A - Vendor Information" below for platforms affected. DAMAGE: Local users may gain root privileges. SOLUTION: If your system is vulnerable, install vendor patches or apply the workaround described in Section III.B. ______________________________________________________________________________ VULNERABILITY The vulnerability exists on multiple platforms. ASSESSMENT: ______________________________________________________________________________ [Appended to H-71a on December 5,1997 with additional patch information from Sun Microsystems, Inc.] [Appended to H-71 on November 20,1997 with additional patch information from Silicon Graphics Inc.] [ Start CERT Advisory ] ============================================================================= CERT* Advisory CA-97.18 Original issue date: June 12, 1997 Last revised: June 12, 1997 Section IIIA and Appendix A - Added vendor information for Digital Equipment Corporation. A complete revision history is at the end of this file. Topic: Vulnerability in the at(1) program - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- The CERT Coordination Center has received reports of a buffer overflow condition in some versions of the at(1) program. By carefully specifying the data that overflows this buffer, any user can execute arbitrary commands as root. The CERT/CC team recommends installing a vendor patch if one is available (see Section III.A). Until you can do so, we recommend disabling at(1) (see Section III.B). We will update this advisory as we receive additional information. Please check advisory files regularly for updates that relate to your site. - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- I. Description The at(1) program can be used by local users to schedule commands to be executed at a later time. When those commands are run, they are run as the user who originally ran at(1). That user will be referred to as the scheduling user. As a precaution, the scheduling user's list of commands is stored in a file in a directory that is not writable by other users. The file's ownership is changed to that of the scheduling user, and that information is used to define the identity of the process that runs the commands when the appointed time arrives. These measures are intended to prevent other users from changing the scheduling user's list of commands or creating new lists to be executed as another user. To achieve this additional level of security, the at(1) program runs as set-user-id root. Some versions of at(1) contain a programming defect that can result in a buffer local to at(1) being overflowed. Through the careful specification of the data that overflows this buffer, arbitrary commands can be executed with the identity of at(1) process, root in this case. II. Impact Any user with an account on a system that contains a defective version of at(1) can execute programs as root. III. Solution A. Install a patch from your vendor Below is a list of vendors who have provided information about at. Details are in Appendix A of this advisory; we will update the appendix as we receive more information. If your vendor's name is not on this list, the CERT/CC did not hear from that vendor. Please contact your vendor directly. Cray Research - A Silicon Graphics Company Digital Equipment Corporation Hewlett-Packard Company IBM Corporation Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. (SCO) Silicon Graphics, Inc. Sun Microsystems, Inc. B. Until you are able to install the appropriate patch, we recommend the following workaround: Turn off at(1) by setting its mode to 0. Do the following as root: # chmod 0 /usr/bin/at Note that the location of at(1) varies from system to system. Consult your system's documentation for the correct location. After you turn off the at(1) command, users will not be able to use it. As an alternative to at(1), consider using the crontab(1) command if your system provides it. ************************************************************************ Appendix A - Vendor Information Below is a list of the vendors who have provided information for this advisory. We will update this appendix as we receive additional information. If you do not see your vendor's name, the CERT/CC did not hear from that vendor. Please contact the vendor directly. Cray Research - A Silicon Graphics Company ========================================== Neither Unicos nor Unicos/mk is believed to be vulnerable. Digital Equipment Corporation ============================= Copyright (c) Digital Equipment Corporation 1997. All rights reserved. Information about this reported problem, and subsequent attempts to reproduce the problem have been unsuccessful for Digital's ULTRIX or Digital UNIX Operating Systems Software. Should further information or testing indicate this problem can be reproduced on Digital's products, a solution will be provided accordingly. At that time Digital will provide notice of the completion/availability of the patches through AES services (DIA, DSNlink FLASH) and be available from your normal Digital Support channel. DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION 6/09/97 ----------------------------- ---------- Hewlett-Packard Company ======================= Hewlett Packard is currently investigating the problem. We will update this advisory through the CERT/CC when the investigation is complete. IBM Corporation =============== See the appropriate release below to determine your action. AIX 3.2 ------- Apply the following fixes to your system: PTF - U443452 U443486 U444191 U444206 U444213 U444243 APAR - IX60796 To determine if you have these PTFs on your system, run the following commands: lslpp -lB U443452 U443486 U444191 U444206 U444213 U444243 AIX 4.1 ------- Apply the following fixes to your system: APAR - IX60894 APAR - IX60890 To determine if you have this APAR on your system, run the following commands: instfix -ik IX60894 instfix -ik IX60890 Or run the following commands: lslpp -h bos.rte.cron lslpp -h bos.rte.libc Your version of bos.rte.cron should be 4.1.4.8 or later. Your version of bos.rte.libc should be 4.1.4.18 or later. AIX 4.2 ------- Apply the following fixes to your system: APAR - IX60892 APAR - IX61125 To determine if you have this APAR on your system, run the following commands: instfix -ik IX60892 instfix -ik IX61125 Or run the following commands: lslpp -h bos.rte.cron lslpp -h bos.rte.libc Your version of bos.rte.cron should be 4.2.0.1 or later. Your version of bos.rte.libc should be 4.2.0.5 or later. To Order -------- APARs may be ordered using Electronic Fix Distribution (via FixDist) or from the IBM Support Center. For more information on FixDist, reference URL: http://service.software.ibm.com/aixsupport/ or send e-mail to aixserv@austin.ibm.com with a subject of "FixDist". IBM and AIX are registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corporation. Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. (SCO) ================================ All SCO operating systems are vulnerable. SCO has made an interim fix available for anonymous ftp: ftp://ftp.sco.com/SSE/sse007.ltr.Z - cover letter ftp://ftp.sco.com/SSE/sse007.tar.Z - replacement binaries The fix includes binaries for the following SCO operating systems: - SCO CMW+ 3.0 - SCO Open Desktop/Open Server 3.0, SCO UNIX 3.2v4 - SCO OpenServer 5.0 - SCO UnixWare 2.1 Silicon Graphics, Inc. ====================== At this time, Silicon Graphics does not have any public information for the at(1) issue. Silicon Graphics has communicated with CERT and other external security parties and is actively investigating this issue. When more Silicon Graphics information (including any possible patches) is available for release, that information will be released via the SGI security mailing list, wiretap. For subscribing to the wiretap mailing list and other SGI security related information, please refer to the Silicon Graphics Security Headquarters website located at: http://www.sgi.com/Support/Secur/security.html Sun Microsystems, Inc. ====================== Sun will be producing patches. [ End CERT Advisory ] [ Appended Silicon Graphics Advisory ] - -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- ______________________________________________________________________________ Silicon Graphics Inc. Security Advisory Title: Vulnerability in at(1) program Title: CERT CA-97.18 Number: 19971102-01-PX Date: November 18, 1997 ______________________________________________________________________________ Silicon Graphics provides this information freely to the SGI user community for its consideration, interpretation, implementation and use. Silicon Graphics recommends that this information be acted upon as soon as possible. Silicon Graphics 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 Silicon Graphics 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. ______________________________________________________________________________ - ------------------------ - ---- Issue Specifics --- - ------------------------ The at(1) program is used by local users to read commands from standard input to be executed at a later time. These commands are run as the user using the at(1) program. In normal operation, the at(1) program runs as a setuid root privileged program inorder to perform its tasks. Unfortunately, a buffer overrun has been discovered in the at(1) program which could allow arbitrary commands to be run as the privileged user root. Silicon Graphics Inc. has investigated the issue and recommends the following steps for neutralizing the exposure. It is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED that these measures be implemented on ALL SGI systems. This issue will be corrected in future releases of IRIX. - --------------- - ---- Impact --- - --------------- The at(1) program is installed on all Silicon Graphics IRIX systems by default. A local account is required in order to exploit this vulnerability both locally and remotely. This vulnerability can be utilized to execute commands with root privileges. This vulnerability has been publically discussed in Usenet newsgroups and mailing lists and also reported in CERT Advisory CA-97.18. - --------------------------- - ---- Temporary Solution --- - --------------------------- Although patches are available for this issue, it is realized that there may be situations where installing the patches immediately may not be possible. The steps below can be used to remove the vulnerability by removing the permissions of the at(1) program. 1) Become the root user on the system. % /bin/su - Password: # 2) Remove the permissions on the at(1) program. # /bin/chmod 0 /usr/bin/at ************ *** NOTE *** ************ Removing the permissions from the at(1) program will prevent the program from executing, even for root user. 3) Return to previous level. # exit $ - ----------------- - ---- Solution --- - ----------------- OS Version Vulnerable? Patch # Other Actions ---------- ----------- ------- ------------- IRIX 3.x yes not avail Note 1 IRIX 4.x yes not avail Note 1 IRIX 5.0.x yes not avail Note 1 IRIX 5.1.x yes not avail Note 1 IRIX 5.2 yes not avail Note 1 IRIX 5.3 yes 2225 IRIX 6.0.x yes not avail Note 1 IRIX 6.1 yes not avail Note 1 IRIX 6.2 yes 2230 IRIX 6.3 yes 2232 IRIX 6.4 yes 2233 NOTES 1) upgrade operating system or see "Temporary Solution" section. Patches are available via anonymous FTP and your service/support provider. The SGI anonymous FTP site is sgigate.sgi.com (204.94.209.1) or its mirror, ftp.sgi.com. Security information and patches can be found in the ~ftp/security and ~ftp/patches directories, respectfully. ##### Patch File Checksums #### The actual patch will be a tar file containing the following files: Filename: README.patch.2225 Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 17470 8 README.patch.2225 Algorithm #2 (sum): 32106 8 README.patch.2225 MD5 checksum: 42A1501001E07C40544C93859E7C6E1B Filename: patchSG0002225 Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 12944 1 patchSG0002225 Algorithm #2 (sum): 30466 1 patchSG0002225 MD5 checksum: C8158D7B6552684FB4B89949627F6CFC Filename: patchSG0002225.eoe1_sw Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 58136 49 patchSG0002225.eoe1_sw Algorithm #2 (sum): 9067 49 patchSG0002225.eoe1_sw MD5 checksum: A97C10C3461E249585895CA72652A2E3 Filename: patchSG0002225.idb Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 15748 1 patchSG0002225.idb Algorithm #2 (sum): 34188 1 patchSG0002225.idb MD5 checksum: 0B7C6DC178A5C327E53F875A113E1971 Filename: README.patch.2230 Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 58607 17 README.patch.2230 Algorithm #2 (sum): 35215 17 README.patch.2230 MD5 checksum: 4340DCE3BA3469941F1361BB6208EDB1 Filename: patchSG0002230 Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 46535 2 patchSG0002230 Algorithm #2 (sum): 5679 2 patchSG0002230 MD5 checksum: 945EC35A9340CF2A74721701589AE3EC Filename: patchSG0002230.eoe_man Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 34340 606 patchSG0002230.eoe_man Algorithm #2 (sum): 28556 606 patchSG0002230.eoe_man MD5 checksum: 83D6EF44CAE016B7C509A63A450E2EEA Filename: patchSG0002230.eoe_sw Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 21159 1954 patchSG0002230.eoe_sw Algorithm #2 (sum): 52976 1954 patchSG0002230.eoe_sw MD5 checksum: E3CA682069D56992A92FC0B1385C8C6F Filename: patchSG0002230.idb Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 27782 15 patchSG0002230.idb Algorithm #2 (sum): 1450 15 patchSG0002230.idb MD5 checksum: 42654CBFA3AD648A9DBBDAA5C3115E31 Filename: README.patch.2232 Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 30727 12 README.patch.2232 Algorithm #2 (sum): 55743 12 README.patch.2232 MD5 checksum: DD9402D2434B1513A3B9886D70CD9243 Filename: patchSG0002232 Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 55916 3 patchSG0002232 Algorithm #2 (sum): 20486 3 patchSG0002232 MD5 checksum: FE63680542E429EA91D33AA15EB06537 Filename: patchSG0002232.eoe_man Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 43804 36 patchSG0002232.eoe_man Algorithm #2 (sum): 27383 36 patchSG0002232.eoe_man MD5 checksum: 6EE21B2D5362295BDC20D5F84BA7DEC4 Filename: patchSG0002232.eoe_sw Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 03690 421 patchSG0002232.eoe_sw Algorithm #2 (sum): 11833 421 patchSG0002232.eoe_sw MD5 checksum: C5AD8C10999347F8FA67871B5B98CB63 Filename: patchSG0002232.idb Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 38374 4 patchSG0002232.idb Algorithm #2 (sum): 4337 4 patchSG0002232.idb MD5 checksum: 0610B31450652A09F343E2B1ED3E939A Filename: README.patch.2233 Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 51881 11 README.patch.2233 Algorithm #2 (sum): 41695 11 README.patch.2233 MD5 checksum: 5D7F90A9AE9F2A483059E6D8D08DF317 Filename: patch2233.pgp.and.chksums Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 00000 0 patch2233.pgp.and.chksums Algorithm #2 (sum): 0 0 patch2233.pgp.and.chksums MD5 checksum: D41D8CD98F00B204E9800998ECF8427E Filename: patchSG0002233 Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 18405 3 patchSG0002233 Algorithm #2 (sum): 23610 3 patchSG0002233 MD5 checksum: 462695A8E5958C4B6A78960F001A2351 Filename: patchSG0002233.eoe_man Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 43804 36 patchSG0002233.eoe_man Algorithm #2 (sum): 27383 36 patchSG0002233.eoe_man MD5 checksum: 6EE21B2D5362295BDC20D5F84BA7DEC4 Filename: patchSG0002233.eoe_sw Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 24542 347 patchSG0002233.eoe_sw Algorithm #2 (sum): 6782 347 patchSG0002233.eoe_sw MD5 checksum: B5D1408146E7B71B1F5A8290ABCF5A4F Filename: patchSG0002233.idb Algorithm #1 (sum -r): 50085 3 patchSG0002233.idb Algorithm #2 (sum): 41850 3 patchSG0002233.idb MD5 checksum: B41E8A31941E47BD46682CFB4641882F - ------------------------- - ---- Acknowledgments --- - ------------------------- Silicon Graphics wishes to thank the CERT Coordination Center for their assistance in this matter. - ------------------------------------------------------------ - ---- Silicon Graphics Inc. Security Information/Contacts --- - ------------------------------------------------------------ If there are questions about this document, email can be sent to cse-security-alert@sgi.com. ------oOo------ Silicon Graphics provides security information and patches for use by the entire SGI community. This information is freely available to any person needing the information and is available via anonymous FTP and the Web. The primary SGI anonymous FTP site for security information and patches is sgigate.sgi.com (204.94.209.1). Security information and patches are located under the directories ~ftp/security and ~ftp/patches, respectively. The Silicon Graphics Security Headquarters Web page is accessible at the URL http://www.sgi.com/Support/security/security.html. For issues with the patches on the FTP sites, email can be sent to cse-security-alert@sgi.com. For assistance obtaining or working with security patches, please contact your SGI support provider. ------oOo------ Silicon Graphics provides a free security mailing list service called wiretap and encourages interested parties to self-subscribe to receive (via email) all SGI Security Advisories when they are released. Subscribing to the mailing list can be done via the Web (http://www.sgi.com/Support/security/wiretap.html) or by sending email to SGI as outlined below. % mail wiretap-request@sgi.com subscribe wiretap end ^d In the example above, is the email address that you wish the mailing list information sent to. The word end must be on a separate line to indicate the end of the body of the message. The control-d (^d) is used to indicate to the mail program that you are finished composing the mail message. ------oOo------ Silicon Graphics provides a comprehensive customer World Wide Web site. This site is located at http://www.sgi.com/Support/security/security.html. ------oOo------ For reporting *NEW* SGI security issues, email can be sent to security-alert@sgi.com or contact your SGI support provider. A support contract is not required for submitting a security report. ______________________________________________________________________________ This information is provided freely to all interested parties and may be redistributed provided that it is not altered in any way, Silicon Graphics is appropriately credited and the document retains and includes its valid PGP signature. - -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 iQCVAwUBNHIcVLQ4cFApAP75AQEyzQP8C7SIc1UjQBOHqK8/uOFOXGx92Se9NCbK EUo81ZRHVfNY+WZ56FrC3YILjpTrXxnGMktbDAzb0mvFr6CIvu5MOgGCclOJb4jm oupXB2jCSk8MBe79Fj+Ap9KxzntfKOnNP/dJMe8HEOCx3RuLJrNoMpN0kQhG0P7F XLIQGZb65ew= =DXZr - -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- [ End Silicon Graphics Advisory ] [ Append Sun Microsystems, Inc. Bulletin ] ______________________________________________________________________________ Sun Microsystems, Inc. Security Bulletin Bulletin Number: #00160 Date: December 3, 1997 Cross-Ref: CERT CA-97.18 Title: at ______________________________________________________________________________ The information contained in this Security Bulletin is provided "AS IS." Sun makes no warranties of any kind whatsoever with respect to the information contained in this Security Bulletin. ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED CONDITIONS, REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES, INCLUDING ANY WARRANTY OF NON-INFRINGEMENT OR IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, ARE HEREBY DISCLAIMED AND EXCLUDED TO THE EXTENT ALLOWED BY APPLICABLE LAW. IN NO EVENT WILL SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC. BE LIABLE FOR ANY LOST REVENUE, PROFIT OR DATA, OR FOR DIRECT, SPECIAL, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, INCIDENTAL OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES HOWEVER CAUSED AND REGARDLESS OF ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF OR INABILITY TO USE THE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS SECURITY BULLETIN, EVEN IF SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC. HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. If any of the above provisions are held to be in violation of applicable law, void, or unenforceable in any jurisdiction, then such provisions are waived to the extent necessary for this disclaimer to be otherwise enforceable in such jurisdiction. ______________________________________________________________________________ 1. Bulletins Topics Sun announces the release of patches for Solaris 2.5.1, 2.5, 2.4, and 2.3 (SunOS 5.5.1, 5.5, 5.4, and 5.3) which relate to a vulnerability in the at program. Sun strongly recommends that you install the patches listed in section 4 immediately on systems running SunOS 5.5.1, 5.5, 5.4, and 5.3. Exploit information for this vulnerability is publicly available. 2. Who is Affected Vulnerable: SunOS versions 5.5.1, 5.5.1_x86, 5.5, 5.5_x86, 5.4, 5.4_x86, 5.3 Not vulnerable: All other supported versions of SunOS. 3. Understanding the Vulnerability The at program allows users to schedule commands to be executed at a later time. Due to insufficient bounds checking on arguments supplied to the at program, it is possible to overwrite the internal stack space of the at program. As the at program is setuid root, this vulnerability may be exploited to gain root access. 4. List of Patches The following patches are available in relation to the above problem. OS version Patch ID __________ ________ SunOS 5.5.1 103690-05 SunOS 5.5.1_x86 103691-05 SunOS 5.5 103723-05 SunOS 5.5_x86 103724-05 SunOS 5.4 102693-05 SunOS 5.4_x86 102694-05 SunOS 5.3 101572-08 ______________________________________________________________________________ Sun acknowledges with thanks CERT/CC for their assistance in this matter. ______________________________________________________________________________ APPENDICES A. Patches listed in this bulletin are available to all Sun customers via World Wide Web at: B. Checksums for the patches listed in this bulletin are available via World Wide Web at: C. Sun security bulletins are available via World Wide Web at: D. Sun Security Coordination Team's PGP key is available via World Wide Web at: E. To report or inquire about a security problem with Sun software, contact one or more of the following: - Your local Sun answer centers - Your representative computer security response team, such as CERT - Sun Security Coordination Team. Send email to: security-alert@sun.com F. To receive information or subscribe to our CWS (Customer Warning System) mailing list, send email to: security-alert@sun.com with a subject line (not body) containing one of the following commands: Command Information Returned/Action Taken _______ _________________________________ help An explanation of how to get information key Sun Security Coordination Team's PGP key list A list of current security topics query [topic] The email is treated as an inquiry and is forwarded to the Security Coordination Team report [topic] The email is treated as a security report and is forwarded to the Security Coordinaton Team. Please encrypt sensitive mail using Sun Security Coordination Team's PGP key send topic A short status summary or bulletin. For example, to retrieve a Security Bulletin #00138, supply the following in the subject line (not body): send #138 subscribe Sender is added to our mailing list. To subscribe, supply the following in the subject line (not body): subscribe cws your-email-address Note that your-email-address should be substituted by your email address. unsubscribe Sender is removed from the CWS mailing list. ______________________________________________________________________________ Copyright 1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. Sun, Sun Microsystems, Solaris and SunOS are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. This Security Bulletin may be reproduced and distributed, provided that this Security Bulletin is not modified in any way and is attributed to Sun Microsystems, Inc. and provided that such reproduction and distribution is performed for non-commercial purposes. [ End Sun Microsystems, Inc. Bulletin ] _____________________________________________________________________________ CIAC wishes to acknowledge the contributions of Dan Farmer, Wolfgang Ley of DFN-CERT, the CERT Coordination Center, and Silicon Graphics Inc, 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. CIAC services are available to DOE, DOE contractors, and the NIH. CIAC can be contacted at: Voice: +1 510-422-8193 FAX: +1 510-423-8002 STU-III: +1 510-423-2604 E-mail: ciac@llnl.gov For emergencies and off-hour assistance, DOE, DOE contractor sites, and the NIH may contact CIAC 24-hours a day. During off hours (5PM - 8AM PST), call the CIAC voice number 510-422-8193 and leave a message, or call 800-759-7243 (800-SKY-PAGE) to send a Sky Page. CIAC has two Sky Page PIN numbers, the primary PIN number, 8550070, is for the CIAC duty person, and the secondary PIN number, 8550074 is for the CIAC Project Leader. Previous CIAC notices, anti-virus software, and other information are available from the CIAC Computer Security Archive. World Wide Web: http://ciac.llnl.gov/ Anonymous FTP: ciac.llnl.gov (198.128.39.53) Modem access: +1 (510) 423-4753 (28.8K baud) +1 (510) 423-3331 (28.8K baud) CIAC has several self-subscribing mailing lists for electronic publications: 1. CIAC-BULLETIN for Advisories, highest priority - time critical information and Bulletins, important computer security information; 2. SPI-ANNOUNCE for official news about Security Profile Inspector (SPI) software updates, new features, distribution and availability; 3. SPI-NOTES, for discussion of problems and solutions regarding the use of SPI products. Our mailing lists are managed by a public domain software package called Majordomo, which ignores E-mail header subject lines. To subscribe (add yourself) to one of our mailing lists, send the following request as the E-mail message body, substituting ciac-bulletin, spi-announce OR spi-notes for list-name: E-mail to ciac-listproc@llnl.gov or majordomo@tholia.llnl.gov: subscribe list-name e.g., subscribe ciac-bulletin You will receive an acknowledgment email immediately with a confirmation that you will need to mail back to the addresses above, as per the instructions in the email. This is a partial protection to make sure you are really the one who asked to be signed up for the list in question. If you include the word 'help' in the body of an email to the above address, it will also send back an information file on how to subscribe/unsubscribe, get past issues of CIAC bulletins via email, etc. PLEASE NOTE: Many users outside of the DOE, ESnet, and NIH computing communities receive CIAC bulletins. If you are not part of these communities, please contact your agency's response team to report incidents. Your agency's team will coordinate with CIAC. The Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams (FIRST) is a world-wide organization. A list of FIRST member organizations and their constituencies can be obtained via WWW at http://www.first.org/. This document was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government. Neither the United States Government nor the University of California nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial products, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation or favoring by the United States Government or the University of California. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or the University of California, and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes. LAST 10 CIAC BULLETINS ISSUED (Previous bulletins available from CIAC) H-61: SGI IRIX df, pset, and eject Buffer Overrun Vulnerabilities H-62: SGI IRIX ordist, login/scheme Buffer Overrun Vulnerability H-63: ftpd Signal Handling Vulnerability H-64: SGI IRIX login LOCKOUT parameter Vulnerability H-65: SGI IRIX rld Security Vulnerability H-66: Vulnerability in suidperl (sperl) H-67: Red Hat Linux X11 Libraries Buffer Overflow H-68: Windows95 Network Password Vulnerability H-69: Vulnerability in getopt (3) H-70: Vulnerability in rpcbind -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 4.0 Business Edition iQCVAwUBNIhvr7nzJzdsy3QZAQE+qgP/YQraYHsvSd8qs2ZlWNlBkvMEjNf9sR3w q9txC2xYIYnRMipLuSevjXZYf18o+v3Y1hXwhdocLmZlv9ljSJZtmfgFc/LQtv68 0eHkxIv35Q7VJN4MvlcS/M6uvXvAMzvTTwQXrQbsHLD2mPCjtjhM0f/NgufyOQCm bI+x3/TqH8U= =ZM7X -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----