Problem Description:
Due to a NULL pointer dereference bug Squid is vulnerable to
a Denial of Service attack against Squid's Gopher gateway.
Severity:
The gopher protocol is always available and enabled in Squid
prior to Squid 6.0.1
Responses triggering this bug are possible to be received from
any gopher server, even those without malicious intent.
CVSS Score of 7.5
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln-metrics/cvss/v3-calculator?vector=AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H&version=3.1
Updated Packages:
The gopher support has been removed in Squid version 6.0.1
If you are using a prepackaged version of Squid then please refer
to the package vendor for availability information on updated
packages.
Determining if your version is vulnerable:
All Squid-2.x up to and including 2.7.STABLE9 are vulnerable.
All Squid-3.x up to and including 3.5.28 are vulnerable.
All Squid-4.x up to and including 4.16 are vulnerable.
All Squid-5.x up to and including 5.9 are vulnerable.
Workaround:
- Reject all gopher URL requests
acl gopher proto gopher
http_access deny gopher
Important: This sequence must be placed above any lines
starting with "http_access allow" in your configuration.
Note: removing the gopher port 70 from the Safe_ports ACL
is not sufficient to avoid this vulnerability.
Contact details for the Squid project:
For installation / upgrade support on binary packaged versions
of Squid: Your first point of contact should be your binary
package vendor.
If you install and build Squid from the original Squid sources
then the [email protected] mailing list is your
primary support point. For subscription details see
http://www.squid-cache.org/Support/mailing-lists.html.
For reporting of non-security bugs in the latest STABLE release
the squid bugzilla database should be used
https://bugs.squid-cache.org/.
For reporting of security sensitive bugs send an email to the
[email protected] mailing list. It's a closed
list (though anyone can post) and security related bug reports
are treated in confidence until the impact has been established.
Credits:
This vulnerability was discovered by Joshua Rogers of Opera Software.
Revision history:
2021-02-20 08:37:38 UTC Initial Report
END
Problem Description:
Due to a NULL pointer dereference bug Squid is vulnerable to
a Denial of Service attack against Squid's Gopher gateway.
Severity:
The gopher protocol is always available and enabled in Squid
prior to Squid 6.0.1
Responses triggering this bug are possible to be received from
any gopher server, even those without malicious intent.
CVSS Score of 7.5
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln-metrics/cvss/v3-calculator?vector=AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H&version=3.1
Updated Packages:
The gopher support has been removed in Squid version 6.0.1
If you are using a prepackaged version of Squid then please refer
to the package vendor for availability information on updated
packages.
Determining if your version is vulnerable:
All Squid-2.x up to and including 2.7.STABLE9 are vulnerable.
All Squid-3.x up to and including 3.5.28 are vulnerable.
All Squid-4.x up to and including 4.16 are vulnerable.
All Squid-5.x up to and including 5.9 are vulnerable.
Workaround:
acl gopher proto gopher
http_access deny gopher
Important: This sequence must be placed above any lines
starting with "http_access allow" in your configuration.
Note: removing the gopher port 70 from the Safe_ports ACL
is not sufficient to avoid this vulnerability.
Contact details for the Squid project:
For installation / upgrade support on binary packaged versions
of Squid: Your first point of contact should be your binary
package vendor.
If you install and build Squid from the original Squid sources
then the [email protected] mailing list is your
primary support point. For subscription details see
http://www.squid-cache.org/Support/mailing-lists.html.
For reporting of non-security bugs in the latest STABLE release
the squid bugzilla database should be used
https://bugs.squid-cache.org/.
For reporting of security sensitive bugs send an email to the
[email protected] mailing list. It's a closed
list (though anyone can post) and security related bug reports
are treated in confidence until the impact has been established.
Credits:
This vulnerability was discovered by Joshua Rogers of Opera Software.
Revision history:
2021-02-20 08:37:38 UTC Initial Report
END