CVE-2019-15790
28.04.2020, 00:15
Apport reads and writes information on a crashed process to /proc/pid with elevated privileges. Apport then determines which user the crashed process belongs to by reading /proc/pid through get_pid_info() in data/apport. An unprivileged user could exploit this to read information about a privileged running process by exploiting PID recycling. This information could then be used to obtain ASLR offsets for a process with an existing memory corruption vulnerability. The initial fix introduced regressions in the Python Apport library due to a missing argument in Report.add_proc_environ in apport/report.py. It also caused an autopkgtest failure when reading /proc/pid and with Python 2 compatibility by reading /proc maps. The initial and subsequent regression fixes are in 2.20.11-0ubuntu16, 2.20.11-0ubuntu8.6, 2.20.9-0ubuntu7.12, 2.20.1-0ubuntu2.22 and 2.14.1-0ubuntu3.29+esm3.Enginsight
Vendor | Product | Version |
---|---|---|
apport_project | apport | - |
canonical | ubuntu_linux | 14.04 |
canonical | ubuntu_linux | 16.04 |
canonical | ubuntu_linux | 18.04 |
canonical | ubuntu_linux | 19.04 |
canonical | ubuntu_linux | 19.10 |
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= Vulnerable software versions

Ubuntu Releases
Common Weakness Enumeration
- CWE-250 - Execution with Unnecessary PrivilegesThe software performs an operation at a privilege level that is higher than the minimum level required, which creates new weaknesses or amplifies the consequences of other weaknesses.
- CWE-269 - Improper Privilege ManagementThe software does not properly assign, modify, track, or check privileges for an actor, creating an unintended sphere of control for that actor.
References