First published: Tue Jun 23 2009(Updated: )
Description from ISC's advisory: Description: ISC dhclient has a stack overflow vulnerability which makes it theoretically possible for a rogue DHCP server to execute arbitrary commands as root on the affected system through stack return subversion. Impact: While generating a subnet number from the server-supplied leased address and subnet-mask 'dhclient' copies the information into a field without verifying if the length of the information exceeds the length of the field. Theoretically this allows a rogue DHCP server to execute arbitrary commands as root on the affected system through stack return subversion. This attack has little to no risk for a client situated on a network that is well defended, whereas clients that are roaming to potentially hostile or ad-hoc networks can see this attack to pose a severe threat. Factors complicating any attack would be: 1) The attacker would need to generate messages the client views as authentic. One option is for the attacker to present itself as a suitable DHCPv4 server for a network, in essence operating as a rogue DHCPv4 server. Another option would be to insert messages into the conversation between the client and the authentic DHCPv4 server. To do this the attacker needs to accurately guess the client's randomly chosen 16-bit transaction ID and insert the attack precisely between the client's request and the valid DHCPv4 server's reply. Neither of these are likely on a well defended network but clients that are roaming may find them, especially the first, a severe threat. 2) The attacker would then need to develop their attack within a limited packet size. Support for DHCPv4 total packet size may be limited from 576 octets through the link MTU size (no support for fragmentation) up to 64KB. Of this, the DHCPv4 option payload space is limited by the space taken up by the BOOTP header space, excepting the FILE and SNAME fields (which can be used in 'option overloading' to carry option contents, such as the subnet-mask).
Affected Software | Affected Version | How to fix |
---|---|---|
ISC DHCP Client |
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REDHAT-BUG-507717 has a critical severity due to the potential for remote code execution by a rogue DHCP server.
To fix REDHAT-BUG-507717, update the ISC dhclient to the latest patched version provided by your system vendor.
The affected software for REDHAT-BUG-507717 is the ISC dhclient.
Yes, REDHAT-BUG-507717 can be exploited remotely by a malicious DHCP server.
The potential impacts of REDHAT-BUG-507717 include arbitrary command execution as root on the affected system.