- Issued:
- 2009-04-14
- Updated:
- 2009-04-14
RHSA-2009:0350 - Security Advisory
Synopsis
Moderate: php security update
Type/Severity
Security Advisory: Moderate
Topic
Updated php packages that fix several security issues are now available for
Red Hat Application Stack v2.
This update has been rated as having moderate security impact by the Red
Hat Security Response Team.
Description
PHP is an HTML-embedded scripting language commonly used with the Apache
HTTP Web server.
A heap-based buffer overflow flaw was found in PHP's mbstring extension. A
remote attacker able to pass arbitrary input to a PHP script using mbstring
conversion functions could cause the PHP interpreter to crash or, possibly,
execute arbitrary code. (CVE-2008-5557)
A flaw was found in the handling of the "mbstring.func_overload"
configuration setting. A value set for one virtual host, or in a user's
.htaccess file, was incorrectly applied to other virtual hosts on the same
server, causing the handling of multibyte character strings to not work
correctly. (CVE-2009-0754)
A directory traversal flaw was found in PHP's ZipArchive::extractTo
function. If PHP is used to extract a malicious ZIP archive, it could allow
an attacker to write arbitrary files anywhere the PHP process has write
permissions. (CVE-2008-5658)
A buffer overflow flaw was found in PHP's imageloadfont function. If a PHP
script allowed a remote attacker to load a carefully crafted font file, it
could cause the PHP interpreter to crash or, possibly, execute arbitrary
code. (CVE-2008-3658)
A flaw was found in the way PHP handled certain file extensions when
running in FastCGI mode. If the PHP interpreter was being executed via
FastCGI, a remote attacker could create a request which would cause the PHP
interpreter to crash. (CVE-2008-3660)
A memory disclosure flaw was found in the PHP gd extension's imagerotate
function. A remote attacker able to pass arbitrary values as the
"background color" argument of the function could, possibly, view portions
of the PHP interpreter's memory. (CVE-2008-5498)
A cross-site scripting flaw was found in a way PHP reported errors for
invalid cookies. If the PHP interpreter had "display_errors" enabled, a
remote attacker able to set a specially-crafted cookie on a victim's system
could possibly inject arbitrary HTML into an error message generated by
PHP. (CVE-2008-5814)
A flaw was found in PHP's json_decode function. A remote attacker could use
this flaw to create a specially-crafted string which could cause the PHP
interpreter to crash while being decoded in a PHP script. (CVE-2009-1271)
All php users are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which
contain backported patches to resolve these issues. The httpd web server
must be restarted for the changes to take effect.
Solution
Before applying this update, make sure that all previously-released errata
relevant to your system have been applied.
This update is available via Red Hat Network. Details on how to use the Red
Hat Network to apply this update are available at
http://kbase.redhat.com/faq/docs/DOC-11259
Affected Products
- Red Hat Application Stack 2 (for RHEL Server) 2 x86_64
- Red Hat Application Stack 2 (for RHEL Server) 2 i386
Fixes
- BZ - 494530 - CVE-2009-1271 php: crash on malformed input in json_decode()
- BZ - 459529 - CVE-2008-3658 php: buffer overflow in the imageloadfont function in gd extension
- BZ - 459572 - CVE-2008-3660 php: FastCGI module DoS via multiple dots preceding the extension
- BZ - 478425 - CVE-2008-5498 php: libgd imagerotate() array index error memory disclosure
- BZ - 479272 - CVE-2009-0754 PHP mbstring.func_overload web server denial of service
- BZ - 478848 - CVE-2008-5557 php: Heap-based buffer overflow in the mbstring extension via crafted string containing a HTML entity (arb code execution)
- BZ - 480167 - CVE-2008-5814 php: XSS via PHP error messages
- BZ - 474824 - CVE-2008-5658 php: ZipArchive::extractTo() Directory Traversal Vulnerability
CVEs
The Red Hat security contact is secalert@redhat.com. More contact details at https://access.redhat.com/security/team/contact/.