CVE-2015-7547 is not actually the first bug found in glibc’s DNS implementation. A few people have privately asked me how this particular flaw compares to last year’s issue, dubbed “Ghost” by its finders at Qualys. Well, here’s a list of what that flaw could not exploit:

apache, cups, dovecot, gnupg, isc-dhcp, lighttpd, mariadb/mysql, nfs-utils, nginx, nodejs, openldap, openssh, postfix, proftpd, pure-ftpd, rsyslog, samba, sendmail, sysklogd, syslog-ng, tcp_wrappers, vsftpd, xinetd.

And here are the results from a few minutes of research on the new bug.

More is possible, but I think the point is made. The reason why the new flaw is significantly more virulent is that:

This is a flaw in getaddrinfo(), which modern software actually uses nowadays for IPv6 compatibility, and

Ghost was actually a really “fiddly” bug, in a way CVE-2015-7547 just isn’t.

As it happens, Qualys did a pretty great writeup of Ghost’s mitigating factors, so I’ll just let the experts speak for themselves:

The gethostbyname*() functions are obsolete; with the advent of IPv6, recent applications use getaddrinfo() instead.

Many programs, especially SUID binaries reachable locally, use gethostbyname() if, and only if, a preliminary call to inet_aton() fails. However, a subsequent call must also succeed (the “inet-aton” requirement) in order to reach the overflow: this is impossible, and such programs are therefore safe.

Most of the other programs, especially servers reachable remotely, use gethostbyname() to perform forward-confirmed reverse DNS (FCrDNS, also known as full-circle reverse DNS) checks. These programs are generally safe, because the hostname passed to gethostbyname() has normally been pre-validated by DNS software: . “a string of labels each containing up to 63 8-bit octets, separated by dots, and with a maximum total of 255 octets.” This makes it impossible to satisfy the “1-KB” requirement. Actually, glibc’s DNS resolver can produce hostnames of up to (almost) 1025 characters (in case of bit-string labels, and special or non-printable characters). But this introduces backslashes (‘\\’) and makes it impossible to satisfy the “digits-and-dots” requirement.



And:

In order to reach the overflow at line 157, the hostname argument must meet the following requirements: Its first character must be a digit (line 127).

– Its last character must not be a dot (line 135).

– It must comprise only digits and dots (line 197) (we call this the “digits-and-dots” requirement).

– Its last character must not be a dot (line 135). – It must comprise only digits and dots (line 197) (we call this the “digits-and-dots” requirement). It must be long enough to overflow the buffer. For example, the non-reentrant gethostbyname*() functions initially allocate their buffer with a call to malloc(1024) (the “1-KB” requirement).

It must be successfully parsed as an IPv4 address by inet_aton() (line 143), or as an IPv6 address by inet_pton() (line 147). Upon careful analysis of these two functions, we can further refine this “inet-aton” requirement: It is impossible to successfully parse a “digits-and-dots” hostname as an IPv6 address with inet_pton() (‘:’ is forbidden). Hence it is impossible to reach the overflow with calls to gethostbyname2() or gethostbyname2_r() if the address family argument is AF_INET6. Conclusion: inet_aton() is the only option, and the hostname must have one of the following forms: “a.b.c.d”, “a.b.c”, “a.b”, or “a”, where a, b, c, d must be unsigned integers, at most 0xfffffffful, converted successfully (ie, no integer overflow) by strtoul() in decimal or octal (but not hexadecimal, because ‘x’ and ‘X’ are forbidden).



Like I said, fiddly, thus giving Qualys quite a bit of confidence regarding what was and wasn’t exploitable. By contrast, the constraints on CVE-2015-7547 are “IPv6 compatible getaddrinfo”. That ain’t much. The bug doesn’t even care about the payload, only how much is delivered and if it had to retry.

It’s also a much larger malicious payload we get to work with. Ghost was four bytes (not that that’s not enough, but still).

In Ghost’s defense, we know that flaw can traverse caches, requiring far less access for attackers. CVE-2015-7547 is weird enough that we’re just not sure.