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Home : Advisories : IRIX telnetd vulnerability

Title: IRIX telnetd vulnerability
Released by: SGI
Date: 6th September 2000
Printable version: Click here
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______________________________________________________________________________

                          SGI Security Advisory



        Title:   IRIX telnetd vulnerability

        Number:  20000801-01-P

        Date:    September 6, 2000



______________________________________________________________________________



SGI provides this information freely to the SGI user community for its

consideration, interpretation, implementation and use.   SGI recommends

that this information be acted upon as soon as possible.



SGI 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 SGI 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 Last Stage of Delirium Group (http://lsd-pl.net/) has reported

via BUGTRAQ that an exploitable buffer overflow has been discovered in

telnetd daemon which can lead to a root compromise.



SGI has investigated the issue and recommends the following steps for

neutralizing the exposure.  It is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED that these measures

be implemented on ALL vulnerable SGI systems.  This issue will be

corrected in future releases of IRIX.





- --------------

- --- Impact ---

- --------------



The telnetd daemon is installed by default on IRIX.



A local user account on the vulnerable system is not required in order

to exploit telnetd daemon.  The telnetd daemon can be exploited remotely

over an untrusted network.



The exploitable buffer overflow vulnerability can lead to a root compromise.



This telnetd buffer overflow vulnerability was reported by LSD on BUGTRAQ:

http://msgs.securepoint.com/cgi-bin/get/bugtraq0008/152.html

http://lsd-pl.net/files/get?IRIX/irx_telnetd



This telnetd vulnerability has been publicly discussed in Usenet newsgroups

and mailing lists.





- --------------------------

- --- 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 disable the telnetd daemon to prevent

exploitation of this vulnerability until patches can be installed.



      ================

      ****  NOTE  ****

      ================



      Disabling telnetd daemon will disable the telnet service.



     1) Become the root user on the system.



              % /bin/su -

              Password:

              #





     2) Edit the file /etc/inetd.conf (for IRIX 5.3 and lower,

        edit /usr/etc/inetd.conf) with your favorite text editor.

        Place a "#" as the first character of the line to comment out

        and deactivate the telnetd daemon.



              # vi /etc/inetd.conf



        {Find the following line}



              telnet stream  tcp  nowait  root  /usr/etc/telnetd  telnetd



        {Place a "#" as the first character of the telnet line}



              #telnet stream  tcp  nowait  root  /usr/etc/telnetd  telnetd



        {Save the file}





     3) Force inetd to re-read the configuration file.



              # /etc/killall -HUP inetd





     4) Kill any existing telnetd process.



              # /etc/killall telnetd





     5) Return to previous level.



              # exit

              %





- ----------------

- --- Solution ---

- ----------------



   OS Version     Vulnerable?     Patch #      Other Actions

   ----------     -----------     -------      -------------



   IRIX 3.x        unknown                     Note 1

   IRIX 4.x        unknown                     Note 1

   IRIX 5.0.x      unknown                     Note 1

   IRIX 5.1.x      unknown                     Note 1

   IRIX 5.2          yes           not avail   Note 1 & 3

   IRIX 5.3          yes          in progress  Note 1 & 3

   IRIX 6.0.x        yes           not avail   Note 1 & 3

   IRIX 6.1          yes           not avail   Note 1 & 3

   IRIX 6.2          yes           4050        Note 2 & 3

   IRIX 6.3          yes          in progress  Note 1

   IRIX 6.4          yes          in progress  Note 1

   IRIX 6.5          yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.1        yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.2        yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.3        yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.4        yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.5        yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.6        yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.7        yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.8        yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.9        yes           4044        Note 3 & 4

   IRIX 6.5.10       no                        Note 4





   NOTES



     1) This version of the IRIX operating has been retired.

        Upgrade to an actively supported IRIX operating system.

        See http://support.sgi.com/irix/news/index.html#policy

        for more information.



     2) This version of the IRIX operating system is in maintenance mode.

        Upgrade to an actively supported IRIX operating system.

        See http://support.sgi.com/irix/news/index.html#policy

        for more information.



     3) See "Temporary Solution" section.



     4) If you have not received an IRIX 6.5.X CD for IRIX 6.5, contact your

        SGI Support Provider or download the IRIX 6.5.X Maintenance Release

        Stream from http://support.sgi.com/ or

        http://patches.sgi.com/support/relstream/





Patches are available via the web, anonymous FTP and from your SGI

service/support provider.



SGI patches for IRIX can be found at:

http://support.sgi.com/irix/ and http://patches.sgi.com/



SGI patches and RPMs for Linux can be found at:

http://support.sgi.com/linux/ and click on patches link and

http://oss.sgi.com/projects/sgilinux-combined/download/security-fixes/



SGI patches for Windows NT or 2000 can be found at:

http://support.sgi.com/nt/



IRIX 5.2-6.4 Recommended/Required Patch Sets can be found at:

http://support.sgi.com/irix/ and http://patches.sgi.com/support/patchset/



IRIX 6.5 Maintenance Release Streams can be found at:

http://support.sgi.com/irix/ and http://patches.sgi.com/support/relstream/



SGI Security Advisories can be found at:

http://www.sgi.com/support/security/ and http://sgigate.sgi.com/security/



SGI Security Patches can be found at:

http://www.sgi.com/support/security/ and http://sgigate.sgi.com/patches/



The primary SGI anonymous FTP site for security information and patches

is sgigate.sgi.com (204.94.209.1). Security information and patches can be

found in the ~ftp/security and ~ftp/patches directories, respectively.



For security and patch management reasons, ftp.sgi.com (mirror of sgigate) lags

behind and does not do a real-time update of ~ftp/security and ~ftp/patches





                 ##### Patch File Checksums ####



The actual patch will be a tar file containing the following files:



Filename:                 README.patch.4044

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    60759 8 README.patch.4044

Algorithm #2 (sum):       27639 8 README.patch.4044

MD5 checksum:             EEA022CD7965F3E7A3B7507F7EB408D9



Filename:                 patchSG0004044

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    51699 3 patchSG0004044

Algorithm #2 (sum):       35763 3 patchSG0004044

MD5 checksum:             B1C88A8AC2AD2A1C2A615BABFB5462C9



Filename:                 patchSG0004044.eoe_sw

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    21346 58 patchSG0004044.eoe_sw

Algorithm #2 (sum):       3477 58 patchSG0004044.eoe_sw

MD5 checksum:             D3810601399BCA7E3140F93418C16937



Filename:                 patchSG0004044.idb

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    62780 2 patchSG0004044.idb

Algorithm #2 (sum):       43138 2 patchSG0004044.idb

MD5 checksum:             9897A6ADBD25EF6FE306C11C4C9CA436

Filename:                 README.patch.4050

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    09695 31 README.patch.4050

Algorithm #2 (sum):       11029 31 README.patch.4050

MD5 checksum:             46670A77C1434CE35161779AEA0A9348





Filename:                 patchSG0004050

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    29875 17 patchSG0004050

Algorithm #2 (sum):       63516 17 patchSG0004050

MD5 checksum:             C40B2DE50608C0A6C79C2167116FF76E



Filename:                 patchSG0004050.eoe_man

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    60740 74 patchSG0004050.eoe_man

Algorithm #2 (sum):       15611 74 patchSG0004050.eoe_man

MD5 checksum:             C45B59724AC5F81F5960BE78104A6B9E



Filename:                 patchSG0004050.eoe_sw

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    47453 1976 patchSG0004050.eoe_sw

Algorithm #2 (sum):       46187 1976 patchSG0004050.eoe_sw

MD5 checksum:             1D9727E9EAC3F52D56F2EC7F481D5C73



Filename:                 patchSG0004050.eoe_sw64

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    49580 104 patchSG0004050.eoe_sw64

Algorithm #2 (sum):       38983 104 patchSG0004050.eoe_sw64

MD5 checksum:             65A02D0562E0F41752363927E3CBC7F4



Filename:                 patchSG0004050.idb

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    55544 16 patchSG0004050.idb

Algorithm #2 (sum):       31605 16 patchSG0004050.idb

MD5 checksum:             143E7D4B9E38E604A4F35D504FCAFF28



Filename:                 patchSG0004050.netman_data_man

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    56900 15 patchSG0004050.netman_data_man

Algorithm #2 (sum):       58999 15 patchSG0004050.netman_data_man

MD5 checksum:             42BEB35E700813967F637E9BB0640385



Filename:                 patchSG0004050.nfs_man

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    05186 17 patchSG0004050.nfs_man

Algorithm #2 (sum):       21113 17 patchSG0004050.nfs_man

MD5 checksum:             F090E7476C01DC64F12F3A094EFAD64B



Filename:                 patchSG0004050.nfs_sw

Algorithm #1 (sum -r):    48229 83 patchSG0004050.nfs_sw

Algorithm #2 (sum):       63547 83 patchSG0004050.nfs_sw

MD5 checksum:             093B835EDC966A30980D914149BED1F0





- ------------------------

- --- Acknowledgments ----

- ------------------------



SGI wishes to thank the users of the Internet Community at large for their

assistance in this matter.





- -----------------------------------------

- --- SGI Security Information/Contacts ---

- -----------------------------------------



If there are questions about this document, email can be sent to

cse-security-alert@sgi.com.



                      ------oOo------



SGI 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 SGI Security Headquarters Web page is accessible at the URL:

http://www.sgi.com/support/security/



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------



SGI 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------



SGI provides a comprehensive customer World Wide Web site. This site is

located at http://www.sgi.com/support/security/ .



                      ------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, SGI is appropriately credited and the document retains and

      includes its valid PGP signature.





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