What does one need for this attack to work? Can it only be launched by people in the exports ? Or can it be launched by anyone? Thanks Steve ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jared Stanbrough" <jareds@pdx.edu> To: <bugtraq@securityfocus.com> Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2003 4:55 PM Subject: Remote Linux Kernel < 2.4.21 DoS in XDR routine. > > Hello all, > > I have discovered a signed/unsigned issue in a routine responsible for > demarshalling XDR data for NFSv3 procedure calls. As far as I can tell, > this bug has existed since NFSv3 support was integrated. It has been > silently fixed in 2.4.21. > > The bug is in the decode_fh routine of fs/nfsd/nfs3xdr.c under the kernel > source tree. > > Vulnerable code: > > static inline u32 * > decode_fh(u32 *p, struct svc_fh *fhp) > { > int size; > fh_init(fhp, NFS3_FHSIZE); > size = ntohl(*p++); > if (size > NFS3_FHSIZE) > return NULL; > > memcpy(&fhp->fh_handle.fh_base, p, size); > fhp->fh_handle.fh_size = size; > return p + XDR_QUADLEN(size); > } > > Where p is a packet of attacker controlled XDR data. If size is made to be > negative, the sanity check is passed and the malicious value is passed to > memcpy. Due to the behavior of the kernel's memcpy, this will cause a very > large copy in kernel space, resulting in an instant kernel panic. > > The attached code is a POC of this vulnerability. It requires that the > vulnerable host has an exported directory available to the attacker. This > is probably not the only way to manifest this bug, however. > > If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me. > > Cheers, > > Jared Stanbrough <jareds@pdx.edu> >