[ SOURCE: http://www.secureroot.com/security/advisories/9640247068.html ] -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 CA-90:05 Last Revised: September 17,1997 Attached copyright statement CERT Advisory August 14, 1990 SunView selection_svc vulnerability - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sun has recently released a patch for a security hole in SunView. This problem affects SunView running on all versions of SunOS (3.5 and before, 4.0, 4.0.1, 4.0.3, and 4.1) and all platforms (Sun3, Sun4, 386i). This vulnerability allows any remote system to read selected files from the workstation running SunView. As noted below in the IMPACT section, the files that can be read are limited. This vulnerability is in the SunView (aka SunTools) selection_svc facility and can be exploited while SunView is in use; however, as noted below in the IMPACT section, this bug may be exploitable after the user quits using Sunview. This problem cannot be exploited while X11 is in use (unless the user runs X11 after running Sunview; see the IMPACT section). This problem is specific to Sun's SunView software; to our knowledge, this problem does NOT affect other vendor platforms or software. OBTAINING THE PATCH To obtain the patch, please call your local Sun Answer Center (in the USA, it's 1-800-USA-4SUN), and ask for patch number 100085-01. You can also reference Sun Bug ID 1039576. The patch is available for SunOS 4.0.1, 4.0.3 and SunOS 4.1, on Sun3, Sun4, and 386i architectures. Contact Sun for further details. IMPACT On Sun3 and Sun4 systems, a remote system can read any file that is readable to the user running SunView. On the 386i, a remote system can read any file on the workstation running SunView regardless of protections. Note that if root runs Sunview, all files are potentially accessible by a remote system. If the password file with the encrypted passwords is world readable, an intruder can take the password file and attempt to guess passwords. In the CERT/CC's experience, most systems have at least one password that can be guessed. Sunview does not kill the selection_svc process when the user quits from Sunview. Thus, unless the process is killed, remote systems can still read files that were readable to the last user that ran Sunview. Under these circumstances, once a user has run Sunview, start using another window system (such as X11), or even logoff, but still have files accessible to remote systems. However, even though selection_svc is not killed when Sunview exits, the patch still solves the security problem and prevents remote access. CONTACT INFORMATION For further questions, please contact your Sun answer center or send mail to security-features@sun.com. Thanks to Peter Shipley for discovering, documenting, and helping resolve this problem. - ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Computer Emergency Response Team/Coordination Center (CERT/CC) Software Engineering Institute Carnegie Mellon University Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890 Internet: cert@cert.org Telephone: 412-268-7090 24-hour hotline: CERT personnel answer 7:30a.m.-6:00p.m. EST, on call for emergencies other hours. Past advisories and other information are available for anonymous ftp from cert.org (192.88.209.5). - --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright 1990 Carnegie Mellon University. Conditions for use, disclaimers, and sponsorship information can be found in http://www.cert.org/legal_stuff.html and ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/legal_stuff . If you do not have FTP or web access, send mail to cert@cert.org with "copyright" in the subject line. CERT is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Revision History September 17,1997 Attached copyright statement -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.0 Charset: noconv iQA/AwUBOBS8cVr9kb5qlZHQEQIe0wCfexfhLAnm4zQU3hSOBNsGHSy3yhQAnjnc yhbeu4R+msnFIZc6YRh87f5T =VRsl -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----