Netkit FTP Server: Privilege escalation An incorrect seteuid() call could allow an FTP user to access some files or directories that would normally be inaccessible. ftpd 2006-11-10 2007-12-30 150292 remote 0.17-r4 0.17-r4

net-ftp/netkit-ftpd is the Linux Netkit FTP server with optional SSL support.

Paul Szabo reported that an incorrect seteuid() call after the chdir() function can allow an attacker to access a normally forbidden directory, in some very particular circumstances, for example when the NFS-hosted targetted directory is not reachable by the client-side root user. Additionally, some potentially exploitable unchecked setuid() calls were also fixed.

A local attacker might craft his home directory to gain access through ftpd to normally forbidden directories like /root, possibly with writing permissions if seteuid() fails and if the ftpd configuration allows that. The unchecked setuid() calls could also lead to a root FTP login, depending on the FTP server configuration.

There is no known workaround at this time.

All Netkit FTP Server users should upgrade to the latest version:

# emerge --sync # emerge --ask --oneshot --verbose ">=net-ftp/netkit-ftpd-0.17-r4"
CVE-2006-5778 falco falco