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Date: Thu, 29 Oct 2015 10:27:06 +0000
From: Portcullis Advisories <advisories@...tcullis-security.com>
To: "'vuln@...unia.com'" <vuln@...unia.com>,
  "'moderators@...db.org'" <moderators@...db.org>,
  "'fulldisclosure@...lists.org'" <fulldisclosure@...lists.org>,
  "'bugtraq@...urityfocus.com'" <bugtraq@...urityfocus.com>
Subject: CVE-2015-7723 - Privilege Escalation Via Symlink Attacks On POSIX
 Shared Memory With Insecure Permissions In AMD fglrx-driver

Vulnerability title: Privilege Escalation Via Symlink Attacks On POSIX Shared Memory With Insecure Permissions In AMD fglrx-driver
CVE: CVE-2015-7723
Vendor: AMD
Product: fglrx-driver
Affected version: 14.4.2
Fixed version: 15.7
Reported by: Tim Brown
Details:

It has been identified that the userland portion of the fglrx-driver utilised by Xorg allows privilege escalation via symlink attacks on POSIX shared memory with insecure permissions.

On systems with a Linux kernel where fs.protected_symlinks is not set to 1, or where this feature is not available, the following code (present in libaticaldd.so and fglrx_dri.so) calls shm_open() with insecure flags specified which allows the Linux kernel to follow an existent symlink under /dev/shm:

mov $0x1b6,%edx ; $edx (mode) = 0666
mov $0x42,%esi ; $esi (oflag) = O_CREAT | O_RDWR - missing O_EXCL
mov %r13,%rdi
callq 208b68 <shm_open@plt>

The same call to shm_open() requests that the permissions of newly created file are 0666 and as a result, an arbitrary file, owned by root, with permissions of 0666 can be created anywhere on the filesystem

Furthermore, the code then proceeds to force the permissions on the resultant file to 0666 using fchmod(). This can be useful if the symlink target already exists:

mov $0x1b6,%esi ; $esi (mode) = 0666
mov %eax,%edi
callq 209058 <fchmod@plt>

Further details at:

https://www.portcullis-security.com/security-research-and-downloads/security-advisories/cve-2015-7723/ 

Copyright:
Copyright (c) Portcullis Computer Security Limited 2015, All rights reserved worldwide. Permission is hereby granted for the electronic redistribution of this information. It is not to be edited or altered in any way without the express written consent of Portcullis Computer Security Limited.

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