CVE-2013-0336

The ipapwd_chpwop function in daemons/ipa-slapi-plugins/ipa-pwd-extop/ipa_pwd_extop.c in the directory server (dirsrv) in FreeIPA before 3.2.0 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (crash) via a connection request without a username/dn, related to the 389 directory server.

CVE-2014-0204

OpenStack Identity (Keystone) before 2014.1.1 does not properly handle when a role is assigned to a group that has the same ID as a user, which allows remote authenticated users to gain privileges that are assigned to a group with the same ID.

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1785-01

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1785-01 – OpenStack Networking is a pluggable, scalable, and API-driven system that provisions networking services to virtual machines. Its main function is to manage connectivity to and from virtual machines. As of Red Hat Enterprise Linux OpenStack Platform 4.0, ‘neutron’ replaces ‘quantum’ as the core component of OpenStack Networking. It was discovered that unprivileged users could in some cases reset admin-only network attributes to their default values. This could lead to unexpected behavior or in some cases result in a denial of service.

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1786-01

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1786-01 – OpenStack Networking is a pluggable, scalable, and API-driven system that provisions networking services to virtual machines. Its main function is to manage connectivity to and from virtual machines. As of Red Hat Enterprise Linux OpenStack Platform 4.0, ‘neutron’ replaces ‘quantum’ as the core component of OpenStack Networking. It was discovered that unprivileged users could in some cases reset admin-only network attributes to their default values. This could lead to unexpected behavior or in some cases result in a denial of service.

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1788-01

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1788-01 – OpenStack Block Storage manages block storage mounting and the presentation of such mounted block storage to instances. The backend physical storage can consist of local disks, or Fiber Channel, iSCSI, and NFS mounts attached to Compute nodes. In addition, Block Storage supports volume backups, and snapshots for temporary save and restore operations. Programatic management is available via Block Storage’s API. A flaw was found in the GlusterFS and Linux smbfs drivers for OpenStack Block Storage. A remote attacker could use this flaw to disclose an arbitrary file from the cinder-volume host to a virtual instance by cloning and attaching a volume with a malicious qcow2 header.

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1789-01

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1789-01 – The OpenStack Identity service authenticates and authorizes OpenStack users by keeping track of users and their permitted activities. The Identity service supports multiple forms of authentication, including user name and password credentials, token-based systems, and AWS-style logins. A flaw was found in the keystone catalog URL replacement. A user with permissions to register an endpoint could use this flaw to leak configuration data, including the master admin_token. Only keystone setups that allow non-cloud-admin users to create endpoints were affected by this issue.

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1795-01

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1795-01 – The cups-filters package contains backends, filters, and other software that was once part of the core CUPS distribution but is now maintained independently. An out-of-bounds read flaw was found in the way the process_browse_data() function of cups-browsed handled certain browse packets. A remote attacker could send a specially crafted browse packet that, when processed by cups-browsed, would crash the cups-browsed daemon. A flaw was found in the way the cups-browsed daemon interpreted the “BrowseAllow” directive in the cups-browsed.conf file. An attacker able to add a malformed “BrowseAllow” directive to the cups-browsed.conf file could use this flaw to bypass intended access restrictions.

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1796-01

Red Hat Security Advisory 2014-1796-01 – OpenShift Enterprise by Red Hat is the company’s cloud computing Platform-as-a-Service solution designed for on-premise or private cloud deployments. It was reported that OpenShift Enterprise 2.2 did not properly restrict access to services running on different gears. This could allow an attacker to access unprotected network resources running in another user’s gear. OpenShift Enterprise 2.2 introduces the oo-gear-firewall command which creates firewall rules and SELinux policy to contain services running on gears to their own internal gear IPs. The command is invoked by default during new installations of OpenShift Enterprise 2.2 to prevent this security issue.