it-securitynotifies AT lists.piratenpartei.de
Betreff: Sicherheitsankündigungen
Listenarchiv
- From: Ben Hutchings <benh AT debian.org>
- To: debian-security-announce AT lists.debian.org
- Subject: [IT-SecNots] [SECURITY] [DSA 3440-1] sudo security update
- Date: Mon, 11 Jan 2016 14:42:42 +0100
- List-archive: <https://service.piratenpartei.de/pipermail/it-securitynotifies>
- List-id: Sicherheitsankündigungen <it-securitynotifies.lists.piratenpartei.de>
- List-url: <http://lists.debian.org/debian-security-announce/>
- Old-return-path: <corsac AT corsac.net>
- Priority: urgent
- Resent-date: Mon, 11 Jan 2016 13:44:04 +0000 (UTC)
- Resent-from: debian-security-announce AT lists.debian.org
- Resent-message-id: <1kuR2ZfvB6F.A.ouH.kG7kWB@bendel>
- Resent-sender: debian-security-announce-request AT lists.debian.org
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA512
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Debian Security Advisory DSA-3440-1 security AT debian.org
https://www.debian.org/security/ Ben Hutchings
January 11, 2016 https://www.debian.org/security/faq
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Package : sudo
CVE ID : CVE-2015-5602
Debian Bug : 804149
When sudo is configured to allow a user to edit files under a directory
that they can already write to without using sudo, they can actually
edit (read and write) arbitrary files. Daniel Svartman reported that a
configuration like this might be introduced unintentionally if the
editable files are specified using wildcards, for example:
operator ALL=(root) sudoedit /home/*/*/test.txt
The default behaviour of sudo has been changed so that it does not allow
editing of a file in a directory that the user can write to, or that is
reached by following a symlink in a directory that the user can write
to. These restrictions can be disabled, but this is strongly
discouraged.
For the oldstable distribution (wheezy), this problem has been fixed
in version 1.8.5p2-1+nmu3+deb7u1.
For the stable distribution (jessie), this problem has been fixed in
version 1.8.10p3-1+deb8u3.
For the testing distribution (stretch), this problem has been fixed
in version 1.8.15-1.1.
For the unstable distribution (sid), this problem has been fixed in
version 1.8.15-1.1.
We recommend that you upgrade your sudo packages.
Further information about Debian Security Advisories, how to apply
these updates to your system and frequently asked questions can be
found at: https://www.debian.org/security/
Mailing list: debian-security-announce AT lists.debian.org
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v2
iQEcBAEBCgAGBQJWk7FLAAoJEG3bU/KmdcClQYwH/3LGjK0rNnxrGTcOwoVMAtWi
iK89C+0P/GDEuqVjpG+WKArvgwyWBsx9AXrHkyXKq8uFdAuYJ2BzsD1r0zmgtRR9
8+d9ez9WwJLzrjFjkrvJp2XgWbIPq2n6eEA0W00oJ+rgXNlvs52xBuWVqSThSqus
b6ta2bIKpGkIotNkXNwEHfCCwMk4BkwECNDXMlIcC9Qz2Gpy8rYSkAyJg4nmcKeb
6VFVsnVp4l8KU9hnFiRmOw2L/yCbNC/IqiboTAR/m7OJJa6HnJ6ohW6iV+ddy9cO
rLvsBlbrvP/DUUPqpIiOmjrlmXYuxnSAYaUgbwnq3odwHLn7CbZUovyIkVOCuoo=
=Yi0D
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
- [IT-SecNots] [SECURITY] [DSA 3440-1] sudo security update, Ben Hutchings, 11.01.2016
Archiv bereitgestellt durch MHonArc 2.6.19.