squid-5.5-6.el9_3.8

エラータID: AXSA:2024-7624:02

Release date: 
Friday, March 22, 2024 - 11:02
Subject: 
squid-5.5-6.el9_3.8
Affected Channels: 
MIRACLE LINUX 9 for x86_64
Severity: 
High
Description: 

Squid is a high-performance proxy caching server for web clients, supporting FTP, Gopher, and HTTP data objects.

Security Fix(es):

* squid: denial of service in HTTP header parser (CVE-2024-25617)
* squid: Denial of Service in HTTP Chunked Decoding (CVE-2024-25111)
* squid: denial of service in HTTP request parsing (CVE-2023-50269)

For more details about the security issue(s), including the impact, a CVSS score, acknowledgments, and other related information, refer to the CVE page(s) listed in the References section.

CVE-2023-50269
Squid is a caching proxy for the Web. Due to an Uncontrolled Recursion bug in versions 2.6 through 2.7.STABLE9, versions 3.1 through 5.9, and versions 6.0.1 through 6.5, Squid may be vulnerable to a Denial of Service attack against HTTP Request parsing. This problem allows a remote client to perform Denial of Service attack by sending a large X-Forwarded-For header when the follow_x_forwarded_for feature is configured. This bug is fixed by Squid version 6.6. In addition, patches addressing this problem for the stable releases can be found in Squid's patch archives.
CVE-2024-25111
Squid is a web proxy cache. Starting in version 3.5.27 and prior to version 6.8, Squid may be vulnerable to a Denial of Service attack against HTTP Chunked decoder due to an uncontrolled recursion bug. This problem allows a remote attacker to cause Denial of Service when sending a crafted, chunked, encoded HTTP Message. This bug is fixed in Squid version 6.8. In addition, patches addressing this problem for the stable releases can be found in Squid's patch archives. There is no workaround for this issue.
CVE-2024-25617
Squid is an open source caching proxy for the Web supporting HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, and more. Due to a Collapse of Data into Unsafe Value bug ,Squid may be vulnerable to a Denial of Service attack against HTTP header parsing. This problem allows a remote client or a remote server to perform Denial of Service when sending oversized headers in HTTP messages. In versions of Squid prior to 6.5 this can be achieved if the request_header_max_size or reply_header_max_size settings are unchanged from the default. In Squid version 6.5 and later, the default setting of these parameters is safe. Squid will emit a critical warning in cache.log if the administrator is setting these parameters to unsafe values. Squid will not at this time prevent these settings from being changed to unsafe values. Users are advised to upgrade to version 6.5. There are no known workarounds for this vulnerability. This issue is also tracked as SQUID-2024:2

Solution: 

Update packages.

Additional Info: 

N/A

Download: 

SRPMS
  1. squid-5.5-6.el9_3.8.src.rpm
    MD5: 4e172dd697ec2e845a661f7c6084dac7
    SHA-256: 081368c688914be7c74f593b398f89dd431ec4beb7acdf1bb20a1a393b659764
    Size: 2.64 MB

Asianux Server 9 for x86_64
  1. squid-5.5-6.el9_3.8.x86_64.rpm
    MD5: 7a87c4dc7a88a7f75aefe9c9c5437e6c
    SHA-256: 2b8b23f54d376fd1f6448e55d53480f052cd789b580aa30a0a631b058c4bd375
    Size: 3.89 MB