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posted by martyb on Saturday October 11 2014, @01:15PM   Printer-friendly
from the he-who-does-not-learn-from-history dept.

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.]

 
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  • (Score: 2) by fnj on Sunday October 12 2014, @06:38AM

    by fnj (1654) on Sunday October 12 2014, @06:38AM (#104988)
    Yes, Debian/Ubuntu and related distros do it right. But realize that in RHEL/CentOS/Fedora and very likely other distros, /bin/sh is a symlink to bash. RHEL is pretty big in major corporations and government organizations.
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