CERT Summary CS-98.01

From: Phillip R. Jaenke (prjat_private)
Date: Fri Feb 13 1998 - 16:25:42 PST

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    CERT* Summary CS-98.01 - SPECIAL EDITION
    February 13, 1998
    
    
    This special edition of the CERT Summary highlights increasing attacks
    involving a vulnerability in rpc.statd, also known as statd on some systems.
    
    Past CERT Summaries are available from
         ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_summaries/
    
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    Current activity relating to rpc.statd
    - --------------------------------------
    
    This special edition of the CERT Summary reports increasing attacks involving
    a vulnerability in rpc.statd, also known as statd on some systems. A
    description of this vulnerability and corrective actions can be found in
    
            http://www.cert.org/pub/advisories/CA-97.26.statd.html
    
    The vulnerability allows a remote attacker to gain root access.
    
    WARNING: In some cases, intruders have downloaded and installed a vendor patch
             designed to fix this vulnerability after they compromise the
             system. If the patch has been applied on your system, you should
             verify who installed it. If the patch has been installed and
             installation was not done by you or another administrator, you may
             have suffered a root compromise.
    
    It appears that intruders are using automated techniques to identify
    vulnerable systems. On compromised machines, intruders have installed suid
    root shells, allowing for subsequent root access from non-privileged
    accounts. In addition, intruders can install Trojan horse versions of utility
    programs like ps, ls, netstat, or find, making it difficult to detect the
    intruders' activity.
    
    
    Checking for signs of intrusion
    - -------------------------------
    
    We encourage sites to check for signs that intruders may have attempted to
    compromise your machines by exploiting this vulnerability. Sites can do this
    by examining your firewall or network monitor (such as argus -
    ftp://ftp.net.cmu.edu/pub/argus-1.5/) logs looking for unexpected connections
    to port 111, the port normally used by the portmapper or rpcbind. You should
    also look for connections to the port used by statd which can be found with
    
            rpcinfo -p | sed -n -e 1p -e /status/p
    
    Note that each time a system is rebooted, the port assigned to statd
    changes. This means that the port in use when you run the rpcinfo program may
    be different from the port the intruders used if a machine has been rebooted.
    
    You should also examine logs on individual machines. Unusual syslog
    entries for statd may also indicate an intrusion attempt or an actual
    compromise.
    
    Also, on some older unpatched Sun systems, the rpcbind program may
    listen on a port different than port 111. We encourage you to correct
    this condition using the steps outlined in
    
            ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_bulletins/VB-97.03.sun
    
    If you discover that your site has been probed for this vulnerability,
    we encourage you to check your systems for signs of compromise using
    our Intruder Detection Checklist, available at
    
            ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/tech_tips/intruder_detection_checklist
    
    Because an intruder may have installed a patch that corrects this problem,
    simply checking for the existence of the patch is not enough. This checklist
    will help you methodically check your systems for signs of compromise. It also
    includes pointers to other resources and suggestions on how to proceed in the
    event of a compromise.
    
    In many cases, intruders have installed packet sniffers on compromised
    machines. These sniffers, used to collect account names and passwords, are
    frequently installed as part of a widely-available toolkit that also replaces
    common system files with Trojan horse programs. The Trojan horse binaries (du,
    ls, ifconfig, netstat, login, ps, etc.)  hide the intruders' files and sniffer
    activity on the system on which they are installed. These packet sniffers
    also frequently hide their logs in system directories such as /usr/include or
    /dev/ptyxx.
    
    For further information and methods for detecting packet sniffers and
    Trojan horse binaries, see the following files:
    
     ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_advisories/CA-94:01.network.monitoring.attacks
    
     ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_advisories/CA-94:05.MD5.checksums
    
    
    Recovering from a compromise and protecting your system
    - -------------------------------------------------------
    
    If you discover that you have suffered a root compromise, we encourage you to
    recover by taking the steps outlined in
    
           ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/tech_tips/root_compromise
    
    This document contains information to help you recover from the incident and
    offers pointers to other resources to help you secure your systems against
    future compromise.
    
    As is good practice with any service, if you do not use NFS you should
    disable it. If you need to use NFS, you should block NFS traffic at
    your router or firewall if possible. We recommend a conservative,
    minimalist approach to network filtering in which only those services
    specifically required are permitted, while all other services are
    denied.
    
    
    Scans in addition to the rpc.statd probes
    - -----------------------------------------
    
    We have continued to see similar scans of the Internet looking for other
    well-known vulnerabilities, and many of these scans have led to root
    compromises. Most recently, intruders have launched widespread scans looking
    for vulnerable IMAP server. For more information, please see
    
    
            ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_summaries/CS-97.06
            ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_summaries/CS-97.05
            ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_summaries/CS-97.04
            ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_summaries/CS-97.03
            ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_summaries/CS-97.02
    
    In addition, widespread scans looking for other NFS-related
    vulnerabilities have occurred in the past. For more information, please
    see
    
            ftp://ftp.cert.org/pub/cert_summaries/CS-96.01
    
    
    Contacting other sites
    - ----------------------
    
    If, during the course of your investigation, you discover evidence
    indicating that other sites are involved, we encourage you to contact
    those sites directly and to include certat_private on the CC line of
    any messages you exchange. The will help us to better understand the
    nature, scope, and frequency of security incidents on the Internet,
    while allowing affected sites to establish direct contact. In
    addition, we may be able to relate the activity to other activity that
    has been reported to us.
    
    
    Reporting to your incident response team
    - ----------------------------------------
    
    If you are represented by another incident response team in the Forum
    of Incident Response and Security Teams (FIRST), we encourage you to
    follow up with that team. More information about FIRST can be found at
    
            http://www.first.org/
    
    
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    How to Contact the CERT Coordination Center
    
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    Copyright 1998 Carnegie Mellon University. Conditions for use, disclaimers,
    and sponsorship information can be found in
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