[RHSA-2002:086-05] Netfilter information leak

From: bugzillaat_private
Date: Thu May 09 2002 - 06:46:09 PDT

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                       Red Hat, Inc. Red Hat Security Advisory
    
    Synopsis:          Netfilter information leak
    Advisory ID:       RHSA-2002:086-05
    Issue date:        2002-05-08
    Updated on:        2002-05-09
    Product:           Red Hat Linux
    Keywords:          netfilter iptables icmp nat
    Cross references:  
    Obsoletes:         
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    1. Topic:
    
    Netfilter ("iptables") can leak information about how port forwarding
    is done in unfiltered ICMP packets.  The older "ipchains" code is not
    affected.
    
    This bug only affects users using the Network Address Translation
    features of firewalls built with netfilter ("iptables").  Red Hat
    Linux's firewall configuration tools use "ipchains," and those
    configurations are not vulnerable to this bug.
    
    2. Relevant releases/architectures:
    
    
    
    3. Problem description:
    
    Systems using the netfilter ("iptables") Network Address Translation
    (NAT) capabilities are subject to the following bug:  When a NAT rule
    applies to the first packet of a connection and that packet later
    causes the system to generate an ICMP error message, the ICMP
    error message is sent out with translated addresses included. This
    address information incorrectly gives the IP address to which the
    connection would have been forwarded if the ICMP error message was
    not generated, which exposes information about the netfilter
    configuration (which ports are being translated) and about the
    network topology (which address the ports are being forwarded to).
    Also, the incorrect ICMP packets may be dropped by other intervening
    stateful firewalls as malformed packets.
    
    ICMP error packets generated by the host being routed to are not
    affected by this bug.
    
    The firewall configuration generated by Red Hat Linux's firewall
    configuration tools uses ipchains, not iptables; thus, default
    configurations of Red Hat Linux are not affected by this bug.
    
    4. Solution:
    
    Unfortunately, this problem currently has no clean fix, but while
    a clean fix is being worked on, there is a sufficient workaround:
    
    Filter out untracked local icmp packets using the following command:
    iptables -A OUTPUT -m state -p icmp --state INVALID -j DROP
    
    5. Bug IDs fixed (http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla for more info):
    
    
    
    6. RPMs required:
    
    
    
    7. Verification:
    
    MD5 sum                          Package Name
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
     
    
    These packages are GPG signed by Red Hat, Inc. for security.  Our key
    is available at:
        http://www.redhat.com/about/contact/pgpkey.html
    
    You can verify each package with the following command:
        rpm --checksig  <filename>
    
    If you only wish to verify that each package has not been corrupted or
    tampered with, examine only the md5sum with the following command:
        rpm --checksig --nogpg <filename>
    
    8. References:
    
    CARTSA-20020402 (http://www.cartel-securite.fr/)
    Thanks to Philippe Biondi <biondi@cartel-securite.fr>
    
    
    Copyright(c) 2000, 2001, 2002 Red Hat, Inc.
    



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