Security Finder

You can use the Security Finder to search for security issues and their impact on Riverbed products. This page is continuously updated, displaying the most current public security issues first. The search box can be used to look up records by specific CVE numbers or relevant search word, e.g. Apache, 8.5.0, Workaround. For additional search tips, refer to article S16165. Security issues listed here are categorized into three groups: fixed, workaround recommended and not applicable.

For general security topics, security best practices and other security related topics, try performing a general search.

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Riverbed Technology is committed to protecting customers against vulnerabilities in our supported products. Vulnerabilities are addressed in accordance to the software support policy. https://support.riverbed.com/content/support/about_support/end_of_life_policy.html

For search tips, read article S16165.

OpenSSH before 7.4 has security vulnerabilities: CVE-2016-10009, CVE-2016-10010, CVE-2016-10011, and CVE-2016-10012. (Bug #275711)

Products:
SteelHead (Appliance), SteelHead Interceptor
Fixed in Version:
steelhead 9.6.0, steelhead 9.2.2, interceptor 6.5.0
Last Modified:
2018-11-28
Summary
DETAILS:

OpenSSH before 7.4 has the following security vulnerabilities:

CVE-2016-10009: Untrusted search path vulnerability in ssh-agent.c in ssh-agent in OpenSSH before 7.4 allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary local PKCS#11 modules by leveraging control over a forwarded agent-socket.

CVE-2016-10010: sshd in OpenSSH before 7.4, when privilege separation is not used, creates forwarded Unix-domain sockets as root, which might allow local users to gain privileges via unspecified vectors, related to serverloop.c.  (Not applicable on Riverbed appliances since privilege separation is used.)

CVE-2016-10011: authfile.c in sshd in OpenSSH before 7.4 does not properly consider the effects of realloc on buffer contents, which might allow local users to obtain sensitive private-key information by leveraging access to a privilege-separated child process.

CVE-2016-10012: The shared memory manager (associated with preauthentication compression) in sshd in OpenSSH before 7.4 does not ensure that a bounds check is enforced by all compilers, which might allow local users to gain privileges by leveraging access to a sandboxed privilege-separation process, related to the m_zback and m_zlib data structures.

FIX:

Upgraded OpenSSH to 7.4p1 to fix these vulnerabilities.

RECOMMENDATION:

Upgrade to a software release with this fix.