Short Name |
DNS:BIND-NXT-OVERFLOW4 |
---|---|
Severity |
Minor |
Recommended |
No |
Category |
DNS |
Keywords |
BIND NXT Overflow (BSD, no chroot) |
Release Date |
2003/04/22 |
Update Number |
1213 |
Supported Platforms |
idp-4.0+, isg-3.0+, j-series-9.5+, mx-11.4+, srx-12.1+, srx-branch-12.1+, vmx-17.4+, vsrx-12.1+, vsrx3bsd-18.2+ |
This signature detects attempts to exploit a known vulnerability in Bind, a popular DNS daemon, when running on BSD. Attackers can send maliciously crafted NXT records that cannot be properly valided by the server.
There are several vulnerabilities in recent BIND packages (pre 8.2.2). The first is a buffer overflow condition which is a result of BIND improperly validating NXT records. The consequence of this being exploited is a remote root compromise (assuming that BIND is running as root, which is default). The second is a denial of service which can occur if BIND does not validate SIG records properly. The next is a bug which allows attackers to cause BIND to consume more file descriptors than can be managed, causing named to crash. The fourth vulnerability is another denial of service which can be caused locally if certain permission conditions are met when validating zone information loaded from disk files. The last is a vulnerability which has to do with closing TCP sockets. If protocols for doing so are not adhered to, BIND can be paused for 120 seconds at a time.