In Red Hat Linux 5.1, linuxconf version 1.11r11-rh2 was inadvertantly setuid root. This creates the potential for security holes that allow attackers to gain root access to your machine. (Users of Red Hat Linux 5.0 and earlier are NOT affected, as linuxconf was not included with any previous version of Red Hat Linux.) If you have installed Red Hat Linux 5.1, you can immediately remove the danger by logging in as root and running the command: chmod -s /bin/linuxconf We also recommend that you update to the latest version of linuxconf, linuxconf-1.11r11-rh3, which fixes this bug. Red Hat Linux 5.1 for Intel: rpm -Uvh ftp://ftp.redhat.com/updates/5.1/i386/linuxconf-1.11r11-rh3.i386.rpm Red Hat Linux 5.1 for Alpha: rpm -Uvh ftp://ftp.redhat.com/updates/5.1/alpha/linuxconf-1.11r11-rh3.alpha.rpm Thanks to BUGTRAQ for finding and reporting this. -- To unsubscribe: mail -s unsubscribe redhat-announce-list-requestat_private < /dev/null
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Fri Apr 13 2001 - 13:54:52 PDT