Date: 17 June 2010
References: ESB-2008.0721 ESB-2008.1076
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AUSCERT External Security Bulletin Redistribution
ESB-2010.0543
AIX OpenSSH multiple vulnerabilities
17 June 2010
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AusCERT Security Bulletin Summary
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Product: OpenSSH
Operating System: AIX
Impact/Access: Provide Misleading Information -- Remote with User Interaction
Read-only Data Access -- Remote with User Interaction
Resolution: Patch/Upgrade
Reference: ESB-2008.0721
ESB-2008.1076
Original Bulletin:
http://www14.software.ibm.com/webapp/set2/subscriptions/pqvcmjd?mode=18&ID=5118&myns=paix52&mync=E
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IBM SECURITY ADVISORY
First Issued: Thu Jun 10 13:10:35 CDT 2010
===============================================================================
VULNERABILITY SUMMARY
VULNERABILITY: AIX OpenSSH multiple vulnerabilities
PLATFORMS: AIX 5.2, 5.3, 6.1
SOLUTION: Apply the fix as described below.
THREAT: See below
CERT VU Number: n/a
CVE Numbers: n/a
===============================================================================
DETAILED INFORMATION
I. DESCRIPTION
X11 man-in-the-middle attack:
When attempting to bind(2) to a port that has previously been bound
with SO_REUSEADDR set, most operating systems check that either the
effective user-id matches the previous bind (common on BSD-derived
systems) or that the bind addresses do not overlap. When the
sshd_config(5) option X11UseLocalhost has been set to "no" - an
attacker may establish a more-specific bind, which will be used in
preference to sshd's wildcard listener.
Plaintext Recovery Attack Against SSH:
If exploited, this attack can potentially allow an attacker to
recover up to 32 bits of plaintext from an arbitrary block of
ciphertext from a connection secured using the SSH protocol in
the standard configuration. If OpenSSH is used in the standard
configuration, then the attacker's success probability for
recovering 32 bits of plaintext is 2^{-18}. A variant of the
attack against OpenSSH in the standard configuration can verifiably recover
14
bits of plaintext with probability 2^{-14}. The success probability
of the attack for other implementations of SSH is not known.
Please see the following for more information:
http://www.openssh.com/txt/release-5.1
http://www.cpni.gov.uk/Docs/Vulnerability_Advisory_SSH.txt
http://www.openssh.org/txt/cbc.adv
II. PLATFORM VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENT
To determine if your system is vulnerable, execute the following
command:
lslpp -L openssh.base.server
The following fileset levels are vulnerable:
AIX 6.1: all versions less than 5.2.0.5300
AIX 5.3: all versions less than 5.2.0.5300
AIX 5.2: all versions
III. FIXES
A fix is available, and it can be downloaded from:
AIX 5.3:
http://downloads.sourceforge.net/openssh-aix/openssh_5.2p1_aix53.tar.Z
AIX 6.1:
http://downloads.sourceforge.net/openssh-aix/openssh_5.2p1_aix61.tar.Z
IV. WORKAROUNDS
X11 man-in-the-middle attack:
Use the default value for X11UseLocalhost which is "yes"
Plaintext Recovery Attack Against SSH:
AES CTR mode and arcfour ciphers are not vulnerable to this attack at all.
These may be preferentially selected by placing the following directive
in sshd_config and ssh_config:
Ciphers aes128-ctr,aes256-ctr,arcfour256,arcfour,aes128-cbc,aes256-cbc
V. CONTACT INFORMATION
If you would like to receive AIX Security Advisories via email,
please visit:
http://www14.software.ibm.com/webapp/set2/subscriptions/pqvcmjd
Comments regarding the content of this announcement can be
directed to:
security-alert@austin.ibm.com
To request the PGP public key that can be used to communicate
securely with the AIX Security Team you can either:
A. Send an email with "get key" in the subject line to:
security-alert@austin.ibm.com
B. Download the key from a PGP Public Key Server. The key ID is:
0x28BFAA12
Please contact your local IBM AIX support center for any
assistance.
eServer is a trademark of International Business Machines
Corporation. IBM, AIX and pSeries are registered trademarks of
International Business Machines Corporation. All other trademarks
are property of their respective holders.
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===========================================================================
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