A vulnerability in sudo allows local users to gain root privileges.
Package | app-admin/sudo on all architectures |
---|---|
Affected versions | < 1.8.20_p1 |
Unaffected versions | >= 1.8.20_p1 |
sudo (su “do”) allows a system administrator to delegate authority to give certain users (or groups of users) the ability to run some (or all) commands as root or another user while providing an audit trail of the commands and their arguments.
Qualys discovered a vulnerability in sudo’s get_process_ttyname() for Linux, that via sudo_ttyname_scan() can be directed to use a user-controlled, arbitrary tty device during its traversal of “/dev” by utilizing the world-writable /dev/shm.
For further information, please see the Qualys Security Advisory
A local attacker can pretend that his tty is any character device on the filesystem, and after two race conditions, an attacker can pretend that the controlled tty is any file on the filesystem allowing for privilege escalation
There is no known workaround at this time.
All sudo users should upgrade to the latest version:
# emerge --sync # emerge --ask --oneshot --verbose ">=app-admin/sudo-1.8.20_p1"
Release date
May 30, 2017
Latest revision
October 10, 2017: 4
Severity
high
Exploitable
local
Bugzilla entries