CVE-2018-6552
Publication date 30 May 2018
Last updated 24 July 2024
Ubuntu priority
Cvss 3 Severity Score
Apport does not properly handle crashes originating from a PID namespace allowing local users to create certain files as root which an attacker could leverage to perform a denial of service via resource exhaustion, possibly gain root privileges, or escape from containers. The is_same_ns() function returns True when /proc/<global pid>/ does not exist in order to indicate that the crash should be handled in the global namespace rather than inside of a container. However, the portion of the data/apport code that decides whether or not to forward a crash to a container does not always replace sys.argv[1] with the value stored in the host_pid variable when /proc/<global pid>/ does not exist which results in the container pid being used in the global namespace. This flaw affects versions 2.20.8-0ubuntu4 through 2.20.9-0ubuntu7, 2.20.7-0ubuntu3.7, 2.20.7-0ubuntu3.8, 2.20.1-0ubuntu2.15 through 2.20.1-0ubuntu2.17, and 2.14.1-0ubuntu3.28.
Status
Package | Ubuntu Release | Status |
---|---|---|
apport | 18.04 LTS bionic |
Fixed 2.20.9-0ubuntu7.1
|
16.04 LTS xenial |
Fixed 2.20.1-0ubuntu2.18
|
|
14.04 LTS trusty |
Fixed 2.14.1-0ubuntu3.29
|
Severity score breakdown
Parameter | Value |
---|---|
Base score | 7.8 · High |
Attack vector | Local |
Attack complexity | Low |
Privileges required | Low |
User interaction | None |
Scope | Unchanged |
Confidentiality | High |
Integrity impact | High |
Availability impact | High |
Vector | CVSS:3.0/AV:L/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H |
References
Related Ubuntu Security Notices (USN)
- USN-3664-1
- Apport vulnerability
- 30 May 2018
- USN-3664-2
- Apport vulnerability
- 4 June 2018