Bug 143081

Summary: CAN-2004-1287 Bernstein class reports buffer overflow in nasm
Product: Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 Reporter: Josh Bressers <bressers>
Component: nasmAssignee: Richard Henderson <rth>
Status: CLOSED ERRATA QA Contact: Brian Brock <bbrock>
Severity: low Docs Contact:
Priority: medium    
Version: 3.0Keywords: Security
Target Milestone: ---   
Target Release: ---   
Hardware: All   
OS: Linux   
Whiteboard: impact=low,public=20041215,source=bugtraq,reported=20041215
Fixed In Version: Doc Type: Bug Fix
Doc Text:
Story Points: ---
Clone Of: Environment:
Last Closed: 2005-05-04 15:01:17 UTC Type: ---
Regression: --- Mount Type: ---
Documentation: --- CRM:
Verified Versions: Category: ---
oVirt Team: --- RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host:
Cloudforms Team: --- Target Upstream Version:
Embargoed:

Description Josh Bressers 2004-12-16 13:10:37 UTC
http://tigger.uic.edu/~jlongs2/holes/nasm.txt

Jonathan Rockway, a student in my Fall 2004 UNIX Security Holes course,
has discovered a remotely exploitable security hole in NASM. I'm
publishing this notice, but all the discovery credits should be assigned
to Rockway.

You are at risk if you receive an asm file from an email message (or a
web page or any other source that could be controlled by an attacker)
and feed that file through NASM. Whoever provides that asm file then has
complete control over your account: he can read and modify your files,
watch the programs you're running, etc.

Of course, if you _run_ a program, you're authorizing the programmer to
take control of your account; but the NASM documentation does not say
that merely _assembling_ a program can have this effect. It's easy to
imagine situations in which a program is run inside a jail but assembled
outside the jail; this NASM bug means that the jail is ineffective.

Proof of concept: On an x86 computer running FreeBSD 4.10, as root, type

   cd /usr/ports/devel/nasm
   make install

to download and compile the NASM program, version 0.98.38 (current).
Then, as any user, save the file 22.S attached to this message, and type

   nasm 22.S

with the unauthorized result that a file named EXPLOITED is created in
the current directory. (I tested this with a 525-byte environment, as
reported by printenv | wc -c.)

Here's the bug: In preproc.c, error() uses an unprotected vsprintf() to
copy data into a 1024-byte buff[] array.

---D. J. Bernstein, Associate Professor, Department of Mathematics,
Statistics, and Computer Science, University of Illinois at Chicago

Comment 1 Josh Bressers 2004-12-16 13:15:20 UTC
This issue also affects RHEL2.1

Comment 2 Jindrich Novy 2005-04-15 12:25:18 UTC
Affects RHEL4 as well.

Comment 3 Jindrich Novy 2005-04-15 12:53:05 UTC
This issue doesn't affect RHEL 2.1 as the vsprintf in preproc.c/error() is
missing completely in nasm-0.98-8.

Comment 4 Jindrich Novy 2005-04-15 13:08:31 UTC
Fix for this is now applied in RHEL3 and RHEL4.

Comment 5 Josh Bressers 2005-05-04 15:01:17 UTC
An advisory has been issued which should help the problem
described in this bug report. This report is therefore being
closed with a resolution of ERRATA. For more information
on the solution and/or where to find the updated files,
please follow the link below. You may reopen this bug report
if the solution does not work for you.

http://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2005-381.html