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Message-ID: <20060221081535.20800.qmail@securityfocus.com>
Date: 21 Feb 2006 08:15:35 -0000
From: mkanat@...zilla.org
To: bugtraq@...urityfocus.com
Subject: [BUGZILLA] Security Advisory for Bugzilla 2.20, 2.21.1, and 2.18.4
Summary
=======
Bugzilla is a Web-based bug-tracking system, used by a large number of
software projects.
This advisory covers three security bugs that have recently been
discovered and fixed in the Bugzilla code:
+ The 'whinedays' and 'mostfreqthreshold' parameters are not correctly
validated in editparams.cgi. The first one can lead to SQL injection.
+ Escaped HTML markup in titles of RSS feeds are incorrectly decoded by
some RSS readers and could potentially lead to XSS vulnerabilities.
+ The login form on the home page, in conjuction with very specific
configuation settings and a specially formed URL, may redirect you
outside the Bugzilla installation, allowing the login name and password
to be stolen.
All Bugzilla installations are advised to upgrade to the latest stable
version of Bugzilla, 2.20.1.
Development snapshots of 2.21 before 2.22rc1 are also vulnerable.
If you are using a development snapshot, you should upgrade to 2.22rc1,
use CVS to update, or apply the patches from the specific bugs listed below.
None of these vulnerabilities affect the old Bugzilla 2.16.x versions.
Vulnerability Details
=====================
Issue 1
-------
Class: SQL injection
Versions: 2.17.1 and above
Description: The 'whinedays' parameter, editable from editparams.cgi,
is not validated before being saved. This can lead to SQL
injection in the whineatnews.pl script. This injection
requires administrative privileges.
The validation for the 'mostfreqthreshold' parameter is also
missing, but this is not exploitable.
Reference: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=312498
Issue 2
-------
Class: Cross Site Scripting
Versions: 2.20rc1 - 2.20, 2.21.1
Description: Some RSS readers incorrectly decode escaped HTML markup in
feed titles and this could be used to inject some scripts.
Although this is not a Bugzilla bug, we prefer to shift to
Atom feeds, where the RFC is unambiguous about HTML markup
in feed titles.
Reference: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=313441
Issue 3
-------
Class: Sensitive Data Exposure
Versions: 2.19.3 and above
Description: When the Bugzilla login page is at a subdirectory of the web
server and the subdirectory name is a resolvable host on the
victim's local network, it is possible to craft a URL that,
when used to login to Bugzilla, would send the user's
credentials to this host.
These conditions make this flaw very difficult to exploit.
Reference: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=325079
Vulnerability Solutions
=======================
The fixes for all of the security bugs mentioned in this advisory
are included in the 2.18.5, 2.20.1, and 2.22rc1 releases. Upgrading
to these releases will protect installations from possible exploits
of these issues.
Full release downloads, patches to upgrade Bugzilla from previous
versions, and CVS upgrade instructions are available at:
http://www.bugzilla.org/download.html
Specific patches for each of the individual issues can be found on the
corresponding bug reports for each issue, at the URL given in the
reference for that issue in the list above.
Credits
=======
The Bugzilla team wish to thank the following people for their
assistance in locating, advising us of, and assisting us to fix
these situations:
Frédéric Buclin
Phil Ringnalda
Myk Melez
Teemu Mannermaa
General information about the Bugzilla bug-tracking system can be found
at http://www.bugzilla.org/
Comments and follow-ups can be directed to the
netscape.public.mozilla.webtools newsgroup or the mozilla-webtools
mailing list; http://www.bugzilla.org/support/ has directions for
accessing these forums.
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