On Mon, Nov 27, 2006 at 04:27:24PM -0500, J. Oquendo wrote: > So for the third time now. Explain to me how I am backdooring someone's > system. > > [root@localhost include]# uname -a > Linux int-mrkt 2.6.18-1.2200.fc5 #1 Sat Oct 14 16:59:26 EDT 2006 i686 > i686 i386 GNU/Linux > [root@localhost include]# awk '/error retrieving/{getline;print $13}' > /var/log/secure|sort -ru > 222.171.20.252 > 211.137.74.58 > > My logs parse out addresses not named and there is no redirection going > on. If you want to say "Hey... It should be written as such" then gladly > do so. You are dealing with output you can't trust there. $13 could be anything, including "\n`rm -rf /`". Later on, you pass $13, unstripped of newlines, backticks, or any number of other special character to a shell running as uid 0. That shell will proceed to execute whatever we would like it to, where "we" are "the remote attacker who doesn't even have an account". I don't believe the suggestion was ever that you had malicious intent, but rather that you have very horrible coding security habits. I'm disinclined to sort out which of your machines I can get root on right now because you are running this script, but I would expect that someone reading this mailing list is already on the way and would strongly advise that you disable those cron jobs. -- gabriel rosenkoetter gr@xxxxxxxxxxxx
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