Oval Definition:oval:com.redhat.rhsa:def:20091550
Revision Date:2009-11-03Version:654
Title:RHSA-2009:1550: kernel security and bug fix update (Important)
Description:The kernel packages contain the Linux kernel, the core of any Linux operating system.

Security fixes:

  • when fput() was called to close a socket, the __scm_destroy() function in the Linux kernel could make indirect recursive calls to itself. This could, potentially, lead to a denial of service issue. (CVE-2008-5029, Important)

  • the sendmsg() function in the Linux kernel did not block during UNIX socket garbage collection. This could, potentially, lead to a local denial of service. (CVE-2008-5300, Important)

  • the exit_notify() function in the Linux kernel did not properly reset the exit signal if a process executed a set user ID (setuid) application before exiting. This could allow a local, unprivileged user to elevate their privileges. (CVE-2009-1337, Important)

  • a flaw was found in the Intel PRO/1000 network driver in the Linux kernel. Frames with sizes near the MTU of an interface may be split across multiple hardware receive descriptors. Receipt of such a frame could leak through a validation check, leading to a corruption of the length check. A remote attacker could use this flaw to send a specially-crafted packet that would cause a denial of service or code execution. (CVE-2009-1385, Important)

  • the ADDR_COMPAT_LAYOUT and MMAP_PAGE_ZERO flags were not cleared when a setuid or setgid program was executed. A local, unprivileged user could use this flaw to bypass the mmap_min_addr protection mechanism and perform a NULL pointer dereference attack, or bypass the Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR) security feature. (CVE-2009-1895, Important)

  • it was discovered that, when executing a new process, the clear_child_tid pointer in the Linux kernel is not cleared. If this pointer points to a writable portion of the memory of the new program, the kernel could corrupt four bytes of memory, possibly leading to a local denial of service or privilege escalation. (CVE-2009-2848, Important)

  • missing initialization flaws were found in getname() implementations in the IrDA sockets, AppleTalk DDP protocol, NET/ROM protocol, and ROSE protocol implementations in the Linux kernel. Certain data structures in these getname() implementations were not initialized properly before being copied to user-space. These flaws could lead to an information leak. (CVE-2009-3002, Important)

  • a NULL pointer dereference flaw was found in each of the following functions in the Linux kernel: pipe_read_open(), pipe_write_open(), and pipe_rdwr_open(). When the mutex lock is not held, the i_pipe pointer could be released by other processes before it is used to update the pipe's reader and writer counters. This could lead to a local denial of service or privilege escalation. (CVE-2009-3547, Important)

    Bug fixes:

  • this update adds the mmap_min_addr tunable and restriction checks to help prevent unprivileged users from creating new memory mappings below the minimum address. This can help prevent the exploitation of NULL pointer dereference bugs. Note that mmap_min_addr is set to zero (disabled) by default for backwards compatibility. (BZ#512642)

  • a bridge reference count problem in IPv6 has been fixed. (BZ#457010)

  • enforce null-termination of user-supplied arguments to setsockopt(). (BZ#505514)

  • the gcc flag "-fno-delete-null-pointer-checks" was added to the kernel build options. This prevents gcc from optimizing out NULL pointer checks after the first use of a pointer. NULL pointer bugs are often exploited by attackers. Keeping these checks is a safety measure. (BZ#511185)

  • a check has been added to the IPv4 code to make sure that rt is not NULL, to help prevent future bugs in functions that call ip_append_data() from being exploitable. (BZ#520300)

    Users should upgrade to these updated packages, which contain backported patches to correct these issues. The system must be rebooted for this update to take effect.
  • Family:unixClass:patch
    Status:Reference(s):CVE-2008-5029
    CVE-2008-5300
    CVE-2009-1337
    CVE-2009-1385
    CVE-2009-1895
    CVE-2009-2848
    CVE-2009-3002
    CVE-2009-3547
    RHSA-2009:1550
    RHSA-2009:1550-01
    RHSA-2009:1550-01
    Platform(s):Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3
    Product(s):
    Definition Synopsis
  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux must be installed
  • OR Package Information
  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 is installed
  • AND
  • kernel earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL is currently running
  • OR kernel earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL is set to boot up on next boot
  • AND
  • kernel-doc is earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL
  • AND kernel-doc is signed with Red Hat master key
  • kernel-source is earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL
  • AND kernel-source is signed with Red Hat master key
  • kernel is earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL
  • AND kernel is signed with Red Hat master key
  • kernel-unsupported is earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL
  • AND kernel-unsupported is signed with Red Hat master key
  • kernel-smp is earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL
  • AND kernel-smp is signed with Red Hat master key
  • kernel-hugemem-unsupported is earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL
  • AND kernel-hugemem-unsupported is signed with Red Hat master key
  • kernel-smp-unsupported is earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL
  • AND kernel-smp-unsupported is signed with Red Hat master key
  • kernel-hugemem is earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL
  • AND kernel-hugemem is signed with Red Hat master key
  • kernel-BOOT is earlier than 0:2.4.21-63.EL
  • AND kernel-BOOT is signed with Red Hat master key
  • BACK