First published: Tue Apr 04 2017(Updated: )
Red Hat Single Sign-On is a standalone server, based on the Keycloak project, that provides authentication and standards-based single sign-on capabilities for web and mobile applications.<br>This release of Red Hat Single Sign-On 7.1 serves as a replacement for Red Hat Single Sign-On 7.0, and includes several bug fixes and enhancements. For further information, refer to the Release Notes linked to in the References section.<br>Security Fix(es):<br><li> It was found that keycloak did not correctly check permissions when handling service account user deletion requests sent to the REST server. An attacker with service account authentication could use this flaw to bypass normal permissions and delete users in a separate realm. (CVE-2016-8629)</li> <li> It was found that JBoss EAP 7 Header Cache was inefficient. An attacker could use this flaw to cause a denial of service attack. (CVE-2016-9589)</li> <li> It was found that keycloak's implementation of HMAC verification for JWS tokens uses a method that runs in non-constant time, potentially leaving the application vulnerable to timing attacks. (CVE-2017-2585)</li> Red Hat would like to thank Gabriel Lavoie (Halogen Software) for reporting CVE-2016-9589 and Richard Kettelerij (Mindloops) for reporting CVE-2017-2585.
Affected Software | Affected Version | How to fix |
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Red Hat Single Sign On |
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The severity of RHSA-2017:0876 is classified as moderate.
To fix RHSA-2017:0876, you need to update your Red Hat Single Sign-On to the latest version as recommended in the advisory.
RHSA-2017:0876 addresses various security vulnerabilities that could potentially allow unauthorized access to the system.
RHSA-2017:0876 affects the Red Hat Single Sign-On product.
RHSA-2017:0876 was released on March 28, 2017.