phpMyAdmin leaves the SQL install script with insecure permissions, potentially leading to a database compromise.
Package | dev-db/phpmyadmin on all architectures |
---|---|
Affected versions | < 2.6.2-r1 |
Unaffected versions | >= 2.6.2-r1 |
phpMyAdmin is a tool written in PHP intended to handle the administration of MySQL databases from a web-browser. phpMyAdmin uses a pma MySQL user to control the linked-tables infrastructure. The SQL install script sets the initial password for the pma user.
The phpMyAdmin installation process leaves the SQL install script with insecure permissions.
A local attacker could exploit this vulnerability to obtain the initial phpMyAdmin password and from there obtain information about databases accessible by phpMyAdmin.
Change the password for the phpMyAdmin MySQL user (pma):
mysql -u root -p
SET PASSWORD FOR 'pma'@'localhost' = PASSWORD('MyNewPassword');
Update your phpMyAdmin config.inc.php:
$cfg['Servers'][$i]['controlpass'] = 'MyNewPassword';
All phpMyAdmin users should change password for the pma user as described above and upgrade to the latest version:
# emerge --sync # emerge --ask --oneshot --verbose ">=dev-db/phpmyadmin-2.6.2-r1"
Release date
April 30, 2005
Latest revision
May 22, 2006: 02
Severity
normal
Exploitable
local
Bugzilla entries