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author | Dr. Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org> | 2014-08-06 14:09:51 +0100 |
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committer | Janusz Kozerski <j.kozerski@samsung.com> | 2014-10-20 15:25:33 +0200 |
commit | 854bb475bafb4e3d3b2c909880d545c50abd7f94 (patch) | |
tree | 952a12135cd4f27a92c65d28c9f5aaabdf5bbe6f /CHANGES | |
parent | a9cefcbf34b54cf5ce14cd6c218370c43ec9a6c4 (diff) | |
download | openssl-854bb475bafb4e3d3b2c909880d545c50abd7f94.tar.gz openssl-854bb475bafb4e3d3b2c909880d545c50abd7f94.tar.bz2 openssl-854bb475bafb4e3d3b2c909880d545c50abd7f94.zip |
update CHANGES
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'CHANGES')
-rw-r--r-- | CHANGES | 79 |
1 files changed, 79 insertions, 0 deletions
@@ -4,6 +4,85 @@ Changes between 1.0.1h and 1.0.1i [xx XXX xxxx] + *) Fix SRP buffer overrun vulnerability. Invalid parameters passed to the + SRP code can be overrun an internal buffer. Add sanity check that + g, A, B < N to SRP code. + + Thanks to Sean Devlin and Watson Ladd of Cryptography Services, NCC + Group for discovering this issue. + (CVE-2014-3512) + [Steve Henson] + + *) A flaw in the OpenSSL SSL/TLS server code causes the server to negotiate + TLS 1.0 instead of higher protocol versions when the ClientHello message + is badly fragmented. This allows a man-in-the-middle attacker to force a + downgrade to TLS 1.0 even if both the server and the client support a + higher protocol version, by modifying the client's TLS records. + + Thanks to David Benjamin and Adam Langley (Google) for discovering and + researching this issue. + (CVE-2014-3511) + [David Benjamin] + + *) OpenSSL DTLS clients enabling anonymous (EC)DH ciphersuites are subject + to a denial of service attack. A malicious server can crash the client + with a null pointer dereference (read) by specifying an anonymous (EC)DH + ciphersuite and sending carefully crafted handshake messages. + + Thanks to Felix Gröbert (Google) for discovering and researching this + issue. + (CVE-2014-3510) + [Emilia Käsper] + + *) By sending carefully crafted DTLS packets an attacker could cause openssl + to leak memory. This can be exploited through a Denial of Service attack. + Thanks to Adam Langley for discovering and researching this issue. + (CVE-2014-3507) + [Adam Langley] + + *) An attacker can force openssl to consume large amounts of memory whilst + processing DTLS handshake messages. This can be exploited through a + Denial of Service attack. + Thanks to Adam Langley for discovering and researching this issue. + (CVE-2014-3506) + [Adam Langley] + + *) An attacker can force an error condition which causes openssl to crash + whilst processing DTLS packets due to memory being freed twice. This + can be exploited through a Denial of Service attack. + Thanks to Adam Langley and Wan-Teh Chang for discovering and researching + this issue. + (CVE-2014-3505) + [Adam Langley] + + *) If a multithreaded client connects to a malicious server using a resumed + session and the server sends an ec point format extension it could write + up to 255 bytes to freed memory. + + Thanks to Gabor Tyukasz (LogMeIn Inc) for discovering and researching this + issue. + (CVE-2014-3509) + [Gabor Tyukasz] + + *) A malicious server can crash an OpenSSL client with a null pointer + dereference (read) by specifying an SRP ciphersuite even though it was not + properly negotiated with the client. This can be exploited through a + Denial of Service attack. + + Thanks to Joonas Kuorilehto and Riku Hietamäki (Codenomicon) for + discovering and researching this issue. + (CVE-2014-5139) + [Steve Henson] + + *) A flaw in OBJ_obj2txt may cause pretty printing functions such as + X509_name_oneline, X509_name_print_ex et al. to leak some information + from the stack. Applications may be affected if they echo pretty printing + output to the attacker. + + Thanks to Ivan Fratric (Google) for discovering this issue. + (CVE-2014-3508) + [Emilia Käsper, and Steve Henson] + *) Fix ec_GFp_simple_points_make_affine (thus, EC_POINTs_mul etc.) for corner cases. (Certain input points at infinity could lead to bogus results, with non-infinity inputs mapped to infinity too.) |