Users with write access to parts of a Subversion repository may bypass read restrictions in mod_authz_svn and read any part of the repository they wish.
Package | dev-util/subversion on all architectures |
---|---|
Affected versions | <= 1.0.4-r1 |
Unaffected versions | >= 1.0.6 |
Subversion is an advanced version control system, similar to CVS, which supports additional functionality such as the ability to move, copy and delete files and directories. A Subversion server may be run as an Apache module, a standalone server (svnserve), or on-demand over ssh (a la CVS' ":ext:" protocol). The mod_authz_svn Apache module works with Subversion in Apache to limit access to parts of Subversion repositories based on policy set by the administrator.
Users with write access to part of a Subversion repository may bypass read restrictions on any part of that repository. This can be done using an "svn copy" command to copy the portion of a repository the user wishes to read into an area where they have write access.
Since copies are versioned, any such copy attempts will be readily apparent.
This is a low-risk vulnerability. It affects only users of Subversion who are running servers inside Apache and using mod_authz_svn. Additionally, this vulnerability may be exploited only by users with write access to some portion of a repository.
Keep sensitive content separated into different Subversion repositories, or disable the Apache Subversion server and use svnserve instead.
All Subversion users should upgrade to the latest available version:
# emerge sync # emerge -pv ">=dev-util/subversion-1.0.6" # emerve ">=dev-util/subversion-1.0.6"
Release date
July 26, 2004
Latest revision
May 22, 2006: 02
Severity
low
Exploitable
remote
Bugzilla entries