rssh is a small shell whose purpose is to restrict users to using scp or sftp, and also provides the facilities to place users in a chroot jail. It can also be used to lock users out of a system completely. William F. McCaw identified a minor security flaw in rssh when used with chroot jails. There is a bug in rssh 2.0 - 2.1.x which allows a user to gather information outside of a chrooted jail unintentionally. The latest release of rssh fixes this problem, and also improves support for some non-openssh sftp clients. Additionally, it extends rssh by allowing cvs, rsync, and rdist. The cause of the problem identified by Mr. McCaw is that rssh expanded command-line arguments prior to entering the chroot jail. This bug DOES NOT allow a user to access any of the files outside the jail, but can allow them to discover what files are in a directory which is outside the jail, if their credentials on the server would normally allow them read/execute access in the specified directory. For example (from William's bug report), if a user has an account on a server machine which restricts them into a jail using rssh, the user can use the following command to access the server and see what files exist in the /etc directory: scp target:/etc/* . The results of this command will look something like this: scp: /etc/DIR_COLORS: No such file or directory scp: /etc/HOSTNAME: No such file or directory scp: /etc/X11: No such file or directory scp: /etc/adjtime: No such file or directory [ ... ] ld.so.cache 100% 675 0.0KB/s 00:00 ld.so.conf 100% 0 0.0KB/s 00:00 [ ... ] passwd 100% 51 0.0KB/s 00:00 [ ... ] scp: /etc/termcap-Linux: No such file or directory scp: /etc/updatedb.conf: No such file or directory scp: /etc/warnquota.conf-sample: No such file or directory scp: /etc/xml: No such file or directory The files which succeed in copying exist inside the chroot jail, and thus should be harmless. All of the files which produce an error message exist in the system's /etc directory, but do not exist inside the chroot jail. The user is placed in the jail before access to any of these files is attempted, so again, it is not possible to access them. For many sites, this is not a serious issue. However if it is important at your site that users not be able to know about any files which exist outside the chroot jail, then you should upgrade as soon as possible. The 2.2.0 release of rssh fixed the problem in question, but was mistakenly released missing some code for parsing per-user options. The 2.2.1 release corrects that problem, and should be the final release of rssh. No further development is planned. You can get the latest release of rssh here: http://www.pizzashack.org/rssh/ -- Derek D. Martin http://www.pizzashack.org/ GPG Key ID: 0x81CFE75D -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://lists.mindrot.org/pipermail/openssh-unix-dev/attachments/20040619/d2931d98/attachment.bin