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[email protected]
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Debian Security Advisory DSA-1915-1
[email protected] http://www.debian.org/security/ dann frazier
October 22, 2009
http://www.debian.org/security/faq
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Package : linux-2.6
Vulnerability : privilege escalation/denial of service/sensitive memory leak Problem type : local/remote
Debian-specific: no
CVE Id(s) : CVE-2009-2695 CVE-2009-2903 CVE-2009-2908 CVE-2009-2909
CVE-2009-2910 CVE-2009-3001 CVE-2009-3002 CVE-2009-3286
CVE-2009-3290 CVE-2009-3613
Notice: Debian 5.0.4, the next point release of Debian 'lenny',
will include a new default value for the mmap_min_addr tunable.
This change will add an additional safeguard against a class of security vulnerabilities known as "NULL pointer dereference" vulnerabilities, but
it will need to be overridden when using certain applications.
Additional information about this change, including instructions for
making this change locally in advance of 5.0.4 (recommended), can be
found at:
http://wiki.debian.org/mmap_min_addr
Several vulnerabilities have been discovered in the Linux kernel that
may lead to a denial of service, sensitive memory leak or privilege escalation. The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project identifies the following problems:
CVE-2009-2695
Eric Paris provided several fixes to increase the protection
provided by the mmap_min_addr tunable against NULL pointer
dereference vulnerabilities.
CVE-2009-2903
Mark Smith discovered a memory leak in the appletalk
implementation. When the appletalk and ipddp modules are loaded,
but no ipddp"N" device is found, remote attackers can cause a
denial of service by consuming large amounts of system memory.
CVE-2009-2908
Loic Minier discovered an issue in the eCryptfs filesystem. A
local user can cause a denial of service (kernel oops) by causing
a dentry value to go negative.
CVE-2009-2909
Arjan van de Ven discovered an issue in the AX.25 protocol
implementation. A specially crafted call to setsockopt() can
result in a denial of service (kernel oops).
CVE-2009-2910
Jan Beulich discovered the existence of a sensitive kernel memory
leak. Systems running the 'amd64' kernel do not properly sanitize
registers for 32-bit processes.
CVE-2009-3001
Jiri Slaby fixed a sensitive memory leak issue in the ANSI/IEEE
802.2 LLC implementation. This is not exploitable in the Debian
lenny kernel as root privileges are required to exploit this
issue.
CVE-2009-3002
Eric Dumazet fixed several sensitive memory leaks in the IrDA,
X.25 PLP (Rose), NET/ROM, Acorn Econet/AUN, and Controller Area
Network (CAN) implementations. Local users can exploit these
issues to gain access to kernel memory.
CVE-2009-3286
Eric Paris discovered an issue with the NFSv4 server
implementation. When an O_EXCL create fails, files may be left
with corrupted permissions, possibly granting unintentional
privileges to other local users.
CVE-2009-3290
Jan Kiszka noticed that the kvm_emulate_hypercall function in KVM
does not prevent access to MMU hypercalls from ring 0, which
allows local guest OS users to cause a denial of service (guest
kernel crash) and read or write guest kernel memory.
CVE-2009-3613
Alistair Strachan reported an issue in the r8169 driver. Remote
users can cause a denial of service (IOMMU space exhaustion and
system crash) by transmitting a large amount of jumbo frames.
For the stable distribution (lenny), this problem has been fixed in
version 2.6.26-19lenny1.
For the oldstable distribution (etch), these problems, where
applicable, will be fixed in updates to linux-2.6 and linux-2.6.24.
We recommend that you upgrade your linux-2.6 and user-mode-linux
packages.
Note: Debian carefully tracks all known security issues across every
linux kernel package in all releases under active security support.
However, given the high frequency at which low-severity security
issues are discovered in the kernel and the resource requirements of
doing an update, updates for lower priority issues will normally not
be released for all kernels at the same time. Rather, they will be
released in a staggered or "leap-frog" fashion.
The following matrix lists additional source packages that were rebuilt for compatibility with or to take advantage of this update:
Debian 5.0 (lenny)
user-mode-linux 2.6.26-1um-2+19lenny1
Upgrade instructions
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wget url
will fetch the file for you
dpkg -i file.deb
will install the referenced file.
If you are using the apt-get package manager, use the line for
sources.list as given below:
apt-get update
will update the internal database
apt-get upgrade
will install corrected packages
You may use an automated update by adding the resources from the
footer to the proper configuration.
Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 alias lenny
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Stable updates are available for alpha, amd64, arm, armel, hppa, i386, ia64, mips, mipsel, powerpc, s390 and sparc.
Source archives:
http://security.debian.org/pool/updates/main/l/linux-2.6/linux-2.6_2.6.26-19lenny1.diff.gz
Size/MD5 checksum: 7643838 b6b5d896bbc02eea1516acefb752b028
http://security.debian.org/pool/updates/main/l/linux-2.6/linux-2.6_2.6.26.orig.tar.gz
Size/MD5 checksum: 61818969 85e039c2588d5bf3cb781d1c9218bbcb
http://security.debian.org/pool/updates/main/l/linux-2.6/linux-2.6_2.6.26-19lenny1.dsc
Size/MD5 checksum: 5778 87d44ca47bc435ab72f03620a8cbcc6a
Architecture independent packages:
http://security.debian.org/pool/updates/main/l/linux-2.6/linux-source-2.6.26_2.6.26-19lenny1_all.deb
Size/MD5 checksum: 48675122 160e198488576fc5207a0f4f16454051
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