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CVE-2008-4990 Enomaly ECP/Enomalism: Insecure temporary file creation
vulnerabilities
1. Synopsis
All versions of Enomaly ECP/Enomalism prior to 2.1.1 use temporary
files in an insecure
manner, allowing for symlink and command injection attacks.
2. Impact Information
Background
Enomaly ECP (formerly Enomalism) is management software for virtual machines.
Description
Sam Johnston of Australian Online Solutions reported that enomalism2.sh uses
the /tmp/enomalism2.pid temporary file in an insecure manner.
Impact
A local attacker could perform a symlink attack to overwrite arbitrary files
on the system with root privileges, or inject arguments to the 'kill' command
to terminate or send arbitrary signals to any process(es) as root.
Exploits
a. ln -s /tmp/target /tmp/enomalism2.pid
b. echo "-9 1" > /tmp/enomalism2.pid
3. Resolution Information
Workaround
There is no known workaround at this time.
Resolution
All Enomaly ECP and Enomalism users should upgrade to the latest version.
History
2008-10-27 Bug initially reported to Enomaly by mail.
2008-10-27 Reuven Cohen acknowledged receipt and suggested a fix.
2008-11-06 CVE-2008-4990 allocated, update requested from Enomaly.
2008-11-08 Reuven Cohen publicly acknowledged the bug:
"Sam's security exploit is relativly minor and should not effect anyone with
decent dom0 access rules. We currently use random filenames that are pretty
hard to guess and if an un-authorized user were to gain access to the Dom0,
you'd probably have bigger issues to deal with. So this really only effects
"trusted" dom0 users. The resolution is don't give out dom0 access to untrusted
users, which is probably a good idea anyway. The whole purpose of ECP is to
abstract resources so you don't have to give that level of access to core
system resources. The next release of Enomaly ECP will address this issue."
2008-12-12 Enomaly ECP 2.1.1 (next subminor release) available with fix
2009-01-29 Enomaly ECP 2.2 (next minor release) available with fix