Like many production quality operating systems, FreeBSD publishes “Security
Advisories”. These advisories are usually mailed to the security lists and noted in the
Errata only after the appropriate releases have been patched. This section will work to
explain what an advisory is, how to understand it, and what measures to take in order to
patch a system.
The FreeBSD security advisories look similar to the one below, taken from the freebsd-security-notifications mailing list.
=============================================================================
FreeBSD-SA-XX:XX.UTIL Security Advisory
The FreeBSD Project
Topic: denial of service due to some problem
Category: core
Module: sys
Announced: 2003-09-23
Credits: Person@EMAIL-ADDRESS
Affects: All releases of FreeBSD
FreeBSD 4-STABLE prior to the correction date
Corrected: 2003-09-23 16:42:59 UTC (RELENG_4, 4.9-PRERELEASE)
2003-09-23 20:08:42 UTC (RELENG_5_1, 5.1-RELEASE-p6)
2003-09-23 20:07:06 UTC (RELENG_5_0, 5.0-RELEASE-p15)
2003-09-23 16:44:58 UTC (RELENG_4_8, 4.8-RELEASE-p8)
2003-09-23 16:47:34 UTC (RELENG_4_7, 4.7-RELEASE-p18)
2003-09-23 16:49:46 UTC (RELENG_4_6, 4.6-RELEASE-p21)
2003-09-23 16:51:24 UTC (RELENG_4_5, 4.5-RELEASE-p33)
2003-09-23 16:52:45 UTC (RELENG_4_4, 4.4-RELEASE-p43)
2003-09-23 16:54:39 UTC (RELENG_4_3, 4.3-RELEASE-p39)
FreeBSD only: NO
For general information regarding FreeBSD Security Advisories,
including descriptions of the fields above, security branches, and the
following sections, please visit
http://www.FreeBSD.org/security/.
I. Background
II. Problem Description
III. Impact
IV. Workaround
V. Solution
VI. Correction details
VII. References
- The Topic field indicates exactly what the problem is.
It is basically an introduction to the current security advisory and notes the
utility with the vulnerability.
- The Category refers to the affected part of the system
which may be one of core, contrib, or
ports. The core category means
that the vulnerability affects a core component of the FreeBSD operating system.
The contrib category means that the vulnerability affects
software contributed to the FreeBSD Project, such as sendmail. Finally the ports
category indicates that the vulnerability affects add on software available as part
of the Ports Collection.
- The Module field refers to the component location, for
instance sys. In this example, we see that the module, sys, is affected; therefore, this vulnerability affects a
component used within the kernel.
- The Announced field reflects the date said security
advisory was published, or announced to the world. This means that the security
team has verified that the problem does exist and that a patch has been committed
to the FreeBSD source code repository.
- The Credits field gives credit to the individual or
organization who noticed the vulnerability and reported it.
- The Affects field explains which releases of FreeBSD are
affected by this vulnerability. For the kernel, a quick look over the output
from ident on the affected files will help in determining
the revision. For ports, the version number is listed after the port name in
/var/db/pkg. If the system does not sync with the FreeBSD
CVS repository and rebuild daily,
chances are that it is affected.
- The Corrected field indicates the date, time, time
offset, and release that was corrected.
- The FreeBSD only field indicates whether this vulnerability
affects just FreeBSD, or if it affects other operating systems as well.
- The Background field gives information on exactly what
the affected utility is. Most of the time this is why the utility exists in
FreeBSD, what it is used for, and a bit of information on how the utility came to
be.
- The Problem Description field explains the security hole
in depth. This can include information on flawed code, or even how the
utility could be maliciously used to open a security hole.
- The Impact field describes what type of impact the
problem could have on a system. For example, this could be anything from a denial
of service attack, to extra privileges available to users, or even giving the
attacker superuser access.
- The Workaround field offers a feasible workaround to
system administrators who may be incapable of upgrading the system. This may be due
to time constraints, network availability, or a slew of other reasons. Regardless,
security should not be taken lightly, and an affected system should either be
patched or the security hole workaround should be implemented.
- The Solution field offers instructions on patching the
affected system. This is a step by step tested and verified method for getting a
system patched and working securely.
- The Correction Details field displays the CVS branch or release name with the periods
changed to underscore characters. It also shows the revision number of the affected
files within each branch.
- The References field usually offers sources of other
information. This can included web URLs,
books, mailing lists, and newsgroups.