- Issued:
- 2013-05-20
- Updated:
- 2013-05-20
RHSA-2013:0833 - Security Advisory
Synopsis
Important: JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6.1.0 update
Type/Severity
Security Advisory: Important
Topic
JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6.1.0, which fixes multiple security
issues, various bugs, and adds enhancements, is now available from the Red
Hat Customer Portal.
The Red Hat Security Response Team has rated this update as having
important security impact. Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) base
scores, which give detailed severity ratings, are available for each
vulnerability from the CVE links in the References section.
Description
JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6 is a platform for Java applications
based on JBoss Application Server 7.
This release serves as a replacement for JBoss Enterprise Application
Platform 6.0.1, and includes bug fixes and enhancements. Refer to the 6.1.0
Release Notes for information on the most significant of these changes,
available shortly from https://access.redhat.com/site/documentation/
Security fixes:
XML encryption backwards compatibility attacks were found against various
frameworks, including Apache CXF. An attacker could force a server to use
insecure, legacy cryptosystems, even when secure cryptosystems were enabled
on endpoints. By forcing the use of legacy cryptosystems, flaws such as
CVE-2011-1096 and CVE-2011-2487 would be exposed, allowing plain text to be
recovered from cryptograms and symmetric keys. (CVE-2012-5575)
Note: Automatic checks to prevent CVE-2012-5575 are only run when
WS-SecurityPolicy is used to enforce security requirements. It is best
practice to use WS-SecurityPolicy to enforce security requirements.
A NULL pointer dereference flaw was found in the OCSP response verification
in OpenSSL. A malicious OCSP server could use this flaw to crash
applications performing OCSP verification by sending a specially-crafted
response. (CVE-2013-0166)
It was discovered that OpenSSL leaked timing information when decrypting
TLS/SSL and DTLS protocol encrypted records when CBC-mode cipher suites
were used. A remote attacker could possibly use this flaw to retrieve plain
text from the encrypted packets by using a TLS/SSL or DTLS server as a
padding oracle. (CVE-2013-0169)
When applications running on JBoss Web used the COOKIE session tracking
method, the org.apache.catalina.connector.Response.encodeURL() method
returned the URL with the jsessionid appended as a query string parameter
when processing the first request of a session. An attacker could possibly
exploit this flaw by performing a man-in-the-middle attack to obtain a
user's jsessionid and hijack their session, or by extracting the jsessionid
from log files. Note that no session tracking method is used by default,
one must be configured. (CVE-2012-4529)
If multiple applications used the same custom authorization module class
name, and provided their own implementations of it, the first application
to be loaded will have its implementation used for all other applications
using the same custom authorization module class name. A local attacker
could use this flaw to deploy a malicious application that provides
implementations of custom authorization modules that permit or deny user
access according to rules supplied by the attacker. (CVE-2012-4572)
The GUI installer created a world-readable auto-install XML file containing
both the JBoss Enterprise Application Platform administrator password and
the sucker password for the selected messaging system in plain text. A
local user able to access the directory where the GUI installer was run
could use this flaw to gain administrative access to the JBoss Enterprise
Application Platform instance. (CVE-2013-0218)
Red Hat would like to thank Tibor Jager, Kenneth G. Paterson and Juraj
Somorovsky of Ruhr-University Bochum for reporting CVE-2012-5575.
CVE-2012-4572 was discovered by Josef Cacek of the Red Hat JBoss EAP
Quality Engineering team, and CVE-2013-0218 was discovered by Arun
Neelicattu of the Red Hat Security Response Team.
Warning: Before applying this update, back up your existing JBoss
Enterprise Application Platform installation and deployed applications.
Users of JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6.0.1 as provided from the
Red Hat Customer Portal are advised to upgrade to JBoss Enterprise
Application Platform 6.1.0.
Solution
The References section of this erratum contains a download link (you must
log in to download the update). Before applying this update, back up your
existing JBoss Enterprise Application Platform installation and deployed
applications.
Affected Products
- JBoss Enterprise Application Platform Text-Only Advisories x86_64
Fixes
- BZ - 868202 - CVE-2012-4529 JBoss Web: jsessionid exposed via encoded url when using cookie based session tracking
- BZ - 872059 - CVE-2012-4572 JBoss: custom authorization module implementations shared between applications
- BZ - 880443 - CVE-2012-5575 jbossws-native, jbossws-cxf, apache-cxf: XML encryption backwards compatibility attacks
- BZ - 903073 - CVE-2013-0218 JBoss EAP/EWP Installer: Generated auto-install xml is world readable
- BZ - 907589 - CVE-2013-0169 SSL/TLS: CBC padding timing attack (lucky-13)
- BZ - 908052 - CVE-2013-0166 openssl: DoS due to improper handling of OCSP response verification
CVEs
The Red Hat security contact is secalert@redhat.com. More contact details at https://access.redhat.com/security/team/contact/.