David Wheeler has a nice write-up of the many aspects of the shellshock vulnerability in Bash, including a timeline of events and commentary on how to prevent vulnerabilities like shellshock in the future.
He even provides a quick test to see if your shell is still susceptible to shellshock:
To determine if a system is vulnerable to shellshock, run the following refined test on a Unix-like system command line (this should work on any Bourne or C shell):
env foo='() { echo not patched; }' bash -c foo
This will reply “bash: foo: command not found” on a repaired system, while a vulnerable system will typically reply “not patched” instead. The initial “env” can be omitted when typing the command into a POSIX/Bourne shell (including bash, dash, and ash).
The write-up shows that several mis-identifications of the problem were communicated, as well as how multiple solutions were constructed—thanks to the code being open-source.
He also presents a similar type of defect under Microsoft Windows where, in a CMD.EXE window, issuing these commands:
set foo=bar^&ping -n 1 localhost echo %foo%
will not only display the value of the "foo" environment variable, it will also cause a ping command to be executed.
[Update: fixed formatting of code sample.]
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 11 2014, @01:55PM
Use the commands in the article, the summary corrupted them. And they did work on my Windows 7 64 bit system. Also all the various bash implementations on my Windows system distributed with things like Cygwin, MinGW and Git are all vulnerable to Shellshock as well. Yay for cross platform compatibility.