ISC Security Advisory - The handling of zero length rdata can cause named to terminate unexpectedly.
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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: ISC Security Advisory: Handling of zero length rdata can cause
named to terminate,unexpectedly
Date: Mon, 04 Jun 2012 05:25:50 -0700
From: Larissa Shapiro <larissas@isc.org>
To: bind-announce@lists.isc.org
ISC Security Advisory:
Note: This email advisory is provided for your information. The most up to date advisory information
will always be at: https://www.isc.org/software/bind/advisories/cve-2012-1667 please use this URL for
the most up to date advisory information.
Title: Handling of zero length rdata can cause named to terminate
unexpectedly
Processing of DNS resource records where the rdata field is zero length
may cause various issues for the servers handling them.
CVE: CVE-2012-1667
Document Version: 1.0
Posting date: 4 June 2012
Program Impacted: BIND
Versions affected: 9.0.x -> 9.6.x, 9.4-ESV->9.4-ESV-R5-P1,
9.6-ESV->9.6-ESV-R7, 9.7.0->9.7.6, 9.8.0->9.8.3, 9.9.0->9.9.1
Severity: Critical
Exploitable: Remotely
Description:
This problem was uncovered while testing with experimental DNS record
types. It is possible to add records to BIND with null (zero length)
rdata fields.
Processing of these records may lead to unexpected outcomes. Recursive
servers may crash or disclose some portion of memory to the client.
Secondary servers may crash on restart after transferring a zone
containing these records. Master servers may corrupt zone data if the
zone option "auto-dnssec" is set to "maintain". Other unexpected
problems that are not listed here may also be encountered.
Impact: This issue primarily affects recursive nameservers.
Authoritative nameservers will only be impacted if an administrator
configures experimental record types with no data. If the server is
configured this way, then secondaries can crash on restart after
transferring that zone. Zone data on the master can become corrupted if
the zone with those records has named configured to manage the DNSSEC
key rotation.
CVSS Score: 8.5
CVSS Equation: (AV:N/AC:L/Au:N/C:P/I:N/A:C)
For more information on the Common Vulnerability Scoring System and to
obtain your specific environmental score please visit:
https://nvd.nist.gov/cvss.cfm?calculator&adv&version=2&vector=(AV:N/AC:L/Au:N/C:P/I:N/A:C)
Workarounds:
Workarounds are under investigation, but none are known at this time.
Solution:
Upgrade to one of the following versions:
https://www.isc.org/software/bind/96-esv-r7-p1
https://www.isc.org/software/bind/976-p1
https://www.isc.org/software/bind/983-p1
https://www.isc.org/software/bind/991-p1
Exploit Status: No known active exploits but a public discussion of the
issue has taken place on a public mailing list.
Acknowledgment: Dan Luther, Level3 Communications, for finding the
issue, Jeffrey A. Spain, Cincinnati Day School, for replication and testing.
*Document Revision History: *
1.0 Released to Public 4 June, 2012
1.1 Updated Severity to Critical
References:
- Do you have questions? Questions regarding this advisory should go to
security-officer@isc.org.
- ISC Security Vulnerability Disclosure Policy: Details of our current
security advisory policy and practice can be found here:
https://www.isc.org/security-vulnerability-disclosure-policy
See our BIND Security Matrix for a complete listing of Security
Vulnerabilites and versions affected.
Note: ISC patches only Currently supported versions. When possible we
indicate EOL versions affected.
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--
===========================
Larissa Shapiro
BIND and DHCP Product Manager, Internet Systems Consortium
larissas@isc.org +1 650 423 1335 https://www.isc.org
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