GLSA 200802-02: Doomsday: Multiple vulnerabilities

Severity:high
Title:Doomsday: Multiple vulnerabilities
Date:02/06/2008
Bugs: #190835
ID:200802-02

Synopsis

Multiple vulnerabilities in Doomsday might allow remote execution of arbitrary code or a Denial of Service.

Background

The Doomsday Engine (deng) is a modern gaming engine for popular ID games like Doom, Heretic and Hexen.

Affected packages

Package Vulnerable Unaffected Architecture(s)
games-fps/doomsday <= 1.9.0_beta52 All supported architectures

Description

Luigi Auriemma discovered multiple buffer overflows in the D_NetPlayerEvent() function, the Msg_Write() function and the NetSv_ReadCommands() function. He also discovered errors when handling chat messages that are not NULL-terminated (CVE-2007-4642) or contain a short data length, triggering an integer underflow (CVE-2007-4643). Furthermore a format string vulnerability was discovered in the Cl_GetPackets() function when processing PSV_CONSOLE_TEXT messages (CVE-2007-4644).

Impact

A remote attacker could exploit these vulnerabilities to execute arbitrary code with the rights of the user running the Doomsday server or cause a Denial of Service by sending specially crafted messages to the server.

Workaround

There is no known workaround at this time.

Resolution

While some of these issues could be resolved in "games-fps/doomsday-1.9.0-beta5.2", the format string vulnerability (CVE-2007-4644) remains unfixed. We recommend that users unmerge Doomsday:

    # emerge --unmerge games-fps/doomsday

References

Availability

This GLSA and any updates to it are available for viewing at the Gentoo Security Website: http://security.gentoo.org/glsa/glsa-200802-02.xml

Concerns?

Security is a primary focus of Gentoo Linux and ensuring the confidentiality and security of our users machines is of utmost importance to us. Any security concerns should be addressed to security@gentoo.org or alternatively, you may file a bug at https://bugs.gentoo.org.

License

Copyright 2010 Gentoo Foundation, Inc; referenced text belongs to its owner(s). The contents of this document are licensed under the Creative Commons - Attribution / Share Alike license.

Thank you!