ArchLinux: 201805-14: lib32-curl: multiple issues
Summary
- CVE-2018-1000300 (arbitrary code execution)
curl >= 7.54.1 and < 7.60.0 might overflow a heap based memory buffer
when closing down an FTP connection with very long server command
replies.
When doing FTP transfers, curl keeps a spare "closure handle" around
internally that will be used when an FTP connection gets shut down
since the original curl easy handle is then already removed. FTP server
response data that gets cached from the original transfer might then be
larger than the default buffer size (16 KB) allocated in the "closure
handle", which can lead to a buffer overwrite. The contents and size of
that overwrite is controllable by the server.
- CVE-2018-1000301 (denial of service)
curl >= 7.20.0 and < 7.60.0 can be tricked into reading data beyond the
end of a heap based buffer used to store downloaded content.
When servers send RTSP responses back to curl, the data starts out with
a set of headers. curl parses that data to separate it into a number of
headers to deal with those appropriately and to find the end of the
headers that signal the start of the "body" part. The function that
splits up the response into headers is called
Curl_http_readwrite_headers() and in situations where it can't find a
single header in the buffer, it might end up leaving a pointer pointing
into the buffer instead of to the start of the buffer which then later
on may lead to an out of buffer read when code assumes that pointer
points to a full buffer size worth of memory to use.
This could potentially lead to information leakage but most likely a
crash/denial of service for applications if a server triggers this
flaw.
Resolution
Upgrade to 7.60.0-1.
# pacman -Syu "lib32-curl>=7.60.0-1"
The problems have been fixed upstream in version 7.60.0.
References
https://curl.se/docs/CVE-2018-1000300.html https://curl.se/docs/CVE-2018-1000301.html https://security.archlinux.org/CVE-2018-1000300 https://security.archlinux.org/CVE-2018-1000301
Workaround
None.