[Forgot Password]
Login  Register Subscribe

30479

 
 

423868

 
 

248392

 
 

909

 
 

195452

 
 

282

Paid content will be excluded from the download.


Download | Alert*
OVAL

SUSE-SU-2016:0624-1 -- SLES libopenssl0_9_8, openssl

ID: oval:org.secpod.oval:def:89045356Date: (C)2021-08-03   (M)2024-02-19
Class: PATCHFamily: unix




This update for openssl fixes various security issues and bugs: Security issues fixed: - CVE-2016-0800 aka the DROWN attack : OpenSSL was vulnerable to a cross-protocol attack that could lead to decryption of TLS sessions by using a server supporting SSLv2 and EXPORT cipher suites as a Bleichenbacher RSA padding oracle. This update changes the openssl library to: * Disable SSLv2 protocol support by default. This can be overridden by setting the environment variable OPENSSL_ALLOW_SSL2 or by using SSL_CTX_clear_options using the SSL_OP_NO_SSLv2 flag. Note that various services and clients had already disabled SSL protocol 2 by default previously. * Disable all weak EXPORT ciphers by default. These can be reenabled if required by old legacy software using the environment variable OPENSSL_ALLOW_EXPORT. - CVE-2016-0705 : A double free bug in the DSA ASN1 parser code was fixed that could be abused to facilitate a denial-of-service attack. - CVE-2016-0797 : The BN_hex2bn and BN_dec2bn functions had a bug that could result in an attempt to de-reference a NULL pointer leading to crashes. This could have security consequences if these functions were ever called by user applications with large untrusted hex/decimal data. Also, internal usage of these functions in OpenSSL uses data from config files or application command line arguments. If user developed applications generated config file data based on untrusted data, then this could have had security consequences as well. - CVE-2016-0799 On many 64 bit systems, the internal fmtstr and doapr_outch functions could miscalculate the length of a string and attempt to access out-of-bounds memory locations. These problems could have enabled attacks where large amounts of untrusted data is passed to the BIO_*printf functions. If applications use these functions in this way then they could have been vulnerable. OpenSSL itself uses these functions when printing out human-readable dumps of ASN.1 data. Therefore applications that print this data could have been vulnerable if the data is from untrusted sources. OpenSSL command line applications could also have been vulnerable when they print out ASN.1 data, or if untrusted data is passed as command line arguments. Libssl is not considered directly vulnerable. - CVE-2015-3197 : The SSLv2 protocol did not block disabled ciphers. Note that the March 1st 2016 release also references following CVEs that were fixed by us with CVE-2015-0293 in 2015: - CVE-2016-0703 : This issue only affected versions of OpenSSL prior to March 19th 2015 at which time the code was refactored to address vulnerability CVE-2015-0293. It would have made the above DROWN attack much easier. - CVE-2016-0704 : Bleichenbacher oracle in SSLv2 This issue only affected versions of OpenSSL prior to March 19th 2015 at which time the code was refactored to address vulnerability CVE-2015-0293. It would have made the above DROWN attack much easier. Also fixes the following bug: - Avoid running OPENSSL_config twice. This avoids breaking engine loading and also fixes a memory leak in libssl

Platform:
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 SP4
Product:
libopenssl0_9_8
openssl
Reference:
SUSE-SU-2016:0624-1
CVE-2015-3197
CVE-2016-0702
CVE-2016-0703
CVE-2016-0705
CVE-2016-0797
CVE-2016-0799
CVE-2016-0800
CVE-2016-0704
CVE    8
CVE-2016-0799
CVE-2016-0704
CVE-2016-0703
CVE-2015-3197
...
CPE    58
cpe:/a:openssl:openssl:1.0.0h
cpe:/a:openssl:openssl:1.0.1:beta1
cpe:/a:openssl:openssl:1.0.0g
cpe:/a:openssl:openssl:1.0.0j
...

© SecPod Technologies