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- Security: Fix double-free in server TCP listener cleanup A double-free in the server could be triggered by an authenticated user if dropbear is running with -a (Allow connections to forwarded ports from any host) This could potentially allow arbitrary code execution as root by an authenticated user. Affects versions 2013.56 to 2016.74. Thanks to Mark Shepard for reporting the crash. CVE-2017-9078 https://secure.ucc.asn.au/hg/dropbear/rev/c8114a48837c - Security: Fix information disclosure with ~/.ssh/authorized_keys symlink. Dropbear parsed authorized_keys as root, even if it were a symlink. The fix is to switch to user permissions when opening authorized_keys A user could symlink their ~/.ssh/authorized_keys to a root-owned file they couldn't normally read. If they managed to get that file to contain valid authorized_keys with command= options it might be possible to read other contents of that file. This information disclosure is to an already authenticated user. Thanks to Jann Horn of Google Project Zero for reporting this. CVE-2017-9079 https://secure.ucc.asn.au/hg/dropbear/rev/0d889b068123 Refresh patches, rework 100-pubkey_path.patch to work with new authorized_keys validation. Signed-off-by: Kevin Darbyshire-Bryant <kevin@darbyshire-bryant.me.uk> |
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config | ||
include | ||
package | ||
scripts | ||
target | ||
toolchain | ||
tools | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
BSDmakefile | ||
Config.in | ||
feeds.conf.default | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
rules.mk |
This is the buildsystem for the LEDE Linux distribution. Please use "make menuconfig" to choose your preferred configuration for the toolchain and firmware. You need to have installed gcc, binutils, bzip2, flex, python, perl, make, find, grep, diff, unzip, gawk, getopt, subversion, libz-dev and libc headers. Run "./scripts/feeds update -a" to get all the latest package definitions defined in feeds.conf / feeds.conf.default respectively and "./scripts/feeds install -a" to install symlinks of all of them into package/feeds/. Use "make menuconfig" to configure your image. Simply running "make" will build your firmware. It will download all sources, build the cross-compile toolchain, the kernel and all choosen applications. To build your own firmware you need to have access to a Linux, BSD or MacOSX system (case-sensitive filesystem required). Cygwin will not be supported because of the lack of case sensitiveness in the file system. Sunshine! Your LEDE Community http://www.lede-project.org