Security Bulletin
Summary
Kernel is used by IBM Netezza Host Management. This bulletin provides mitigation for the reported CVEs.
Vulnerability Details
CVEID: CVE-2021-3772
DESCRIPTION: Linux Kernel is vulnerable to a denial of service, caused by improper validation of integrity check value by the Linux SCTP stack. By sending packets with spoofed IP addresses and knowledge of the IP-addresses and port numbers being used, an attacker could exploit this vulnerability to kill an existing SCTP association.
CVSS Base score: 5.9
CVSS Temporal Score: See: https://exchange.xforce.ibmcloud.com/vulnerabilities/213794 for the current score.
CVSS Vector: (CVSS:3.0/AV:N/AC:H/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H)
CVEID: CVE-2021-3655
DESCRIPTION: Linux Kernel could allow a remote attacker to obtain sensitive information, caused by missing size validations on inbound SCTP packets. By sending specially-crafted packets, an attacker could exploit this vulnerability to read uninitialized memory.
CVSS Base score: 5.3
CVSS Temporal Score: See: https://exchange.xforce.ibmcloud.com/vulnerabilities/206865 for the current score.
CVSS Vector: (CVSS:3.0/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:L/I:N/A:N)
Affected Products and Versions
| Affected Product(s) | Version(s) |
| IBM Netezza Host Management | All IBM Netezza Host Management starting 5.4.9.0 |
Remediation/Fixes
Mitigation of the reported CVEs : CVE-2021-3655, CVE-2021-3772 blocklisting kernel module sctp to prevent them from loading automatically on PureData System for Analytics N200x and N3001 is as follows:
1. Change to user nz:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# su – nz
2. Check to see if Call Home is enabled:
[nz@nzhost1 ~]$ nzcallhome -status
If enabled, disable it:
[nz@nzhost1 ~]$ nzcallhome –off
Note: Ensure that nzcallhome returns status as disabled. If there are errors in the callHome.txt configuration file, errors are listed in the output, and call-Home is disabled.
3. Check the state of the Netezza system:
[nz@nzhost1 ~]$ nzstate
4. If the system state is online, stop the system using the command:
[nz@nzhost1 ~]$ nzstop
5. Wait for the system to stop, using the command:
[nz@nzhos1t ~]$ nzstate
System state is 'Stopped'.
6. Exit from the nz session to return to user root:
[nz@nzhost1 ~]$ exit
7. Logged into the active host as root, type the following commands to stop the heartbeat processes:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# ssh ha2 /sbin/service heartbeat stop
[root@nzhost1 ~]# /sbin/service heartbeat stop
8. Run below commands as a root user to disable heartbeat from startup:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# ssh ha2 /sbin/chkconfig heartbeat off
[root@nzhost1 ~]# /sbin/chkconfig heartbeat off
9. Type the following commands to stop the DRBD processes:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# ssh ha2 /sbin/service drbd stop
[root@nzhost1 ~]# /sbin/service drbd stop
10. Run below commands as a root user to disable drbd from startup:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# ssh ha2 /sbin/chkconfig drbd off
[root@nzhost1 ~]# /sbin/chkconfig drbd off
Execute below steps using "root" user on both ha1/ha2 hosts
Step 1: Check if kernel module sctp is loaded in the hosts
lsmod | grep sctp
example:
lsmod | grep sctp
sctp 268911 0
Note: No output on Step 1 for any module indicates, that module is not loaded hence skip Step 2 for that module, and proceed with Step 3
Step 2: Unload kernel module sctp if it is loaded
modprobe -rv sctp
example:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# modprobe -rv sctp
rmmod /lib/modules/2.6.32-754.41.2.el6.x86_64/kernel/net/sctp/sctp.ko
Kernel modules and their dependent modules will be unloaded in the reverse order that they are loaded, given that no processes depend on any of the modules being unloaded.
Step 3: To prevent module from being loaded directly you add the blocklist line to a configuration file specific to the system configuration.
echo "blocklist sctp" >> /etc/modprobe.d/local-blocklist.conf
example :
[root@nzhost1 ~]# echo "blocklist sctp" >> /etc/modprobe.d/local-blocklist.conf
[root@nzhost1 ~]# cat /etc/modprobe.d/local-blocklist.conf | grep sctp
blocklist sctp
Step 4: Kernel modules can be loaded directly or loaded as a dependency from another module
To prevent installation as a dependency from another module follow below step:
echo "install sctp /bin/false" >> /etc/modprobe.d/local-blocklist.conf
example:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# echo "install sctp /bin/false" >> /etc/modprobe.d/local-blocklist.conf
[root@nzhost1 ~]# cat /etc/modprobe.d/local-blocklist.conf | grep sctp
blocklist sctp
install sctp /bin/false
The install line simply causes /bin/false to be run instead of installing a module.
Step 5: Make a backup copy of your initramfs.
cp /boot/initramfs-$(uname -r).img /boot/initramfs-$(uname -r).img.$(date +%m-%d-%H%M%S).bak
Example:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# cp /boot/initramfs-$(uname -r).img /boot/initramfs-$(uname -r).img.$(date +%m-%d-%H%M%S).bak
[root@nzhost1 ~]# uname -r
2.6.32-754.41.2.el6.x86_64
[root@nzhost1 ~]# ll /boot/initramfs-2.6.32-754.41.2.el6.x86_64.img.10-01-041951.bak
-rw------- 1 root root 22126152 Sep 17 03:52 /boot/initramfs-2.6.32-754.41.2.el6.x86_64.img.10-01-041951.bak
Step 6: If the kernel module is part of the initramfs (boot configuration), rebuild your initial ramdisk image, omitting the module to be avoided
dracut --omit-drivers sctp -f
example:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# dracut --omit-drivers sctp -f
[root@nzhost1 ~]# lsinitrd /boot/initramfs-2.6.32-754.35.1.el6.x86_64.img | grep sctp
Step 7: Append module_name.blocklist to the kernel cmdline. We give it an invalid parameter of blocklist and set it to 1 as a way to preclude the kernel from loading it.
sed --follow-symlinks -i '/\s*kernel \/vmlinuz/s/$/ sctp.blocklist=1/' /etc/grub.conf
example :
[root@nzhost1 ~]# sed --follow-symlinks -i '/\s*kernel \/vmlinuz/s/$/ sctp.blocklist=1/' /etc/grub.conf
Step 8: blocklist the kernel module in kdump's configuration file.
echo "blocklist sctp" >> /etc/kdump.conf
example:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# echo "blocklist sctp" >> /etc/kdump.conf
[root@nzhost1 ~]# cat /etc/kdump.conf | grep sctp
blocklist sctp
Note: Perform Step 9 if kexec-tools is installed and kdump is configured else continue with Step 10.
Perform below commands to check if kexec-tools is installed and Kdump is operational
[root@nzhost1 ~]# rpm -qa | grep kexec-tools
[root@nzhost1 ~]# service kdump status
Step 9: Restart the kdump service to pick up the changes to kdump's initrd.
service kdump restart
example:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# service kdump restart
Stopping kdump: [ OK ]
Detected change(s) the following file(s):
/etc/kdump.conf
Rebuilding /boot/initrd-2.6.32-754.31.1.el6.x86_64kdump.img
Starting kdump: [ OK ]
Step 10: Reboot the system at a convenient time to have the changes take effect.
Make sure the secondary host is up by pinging or logging in before rebooting the primary host.
/sbin/shutdown -r now
example:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# /sbin/shutdown -r now
Make sure the primary server comes up and is reachable before performing Mitigation steps on the secondary server.
After applying the mitigation:
1. Start the services using following:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# service heartbeat start
[root@nzhost1 ~]# ssh ha2 service heartbeat start
[root@nzhost1 ~]# service drbd start
[root@nzhost1 ~]# ssh ha2 service drbd start
2. Check the stat of the system. Type:
[root@nzhost1 ~]# crm_mon -i5
Result: When the cluster manager comes up and is ready, status appears as follows.
Make sure that nzinit has started before you proceed. (This could take a few minutes.)
Node: nps61074 (e890696b-ab7b-42c0-9e91-4c1cdacbe3f9): online
Node: nps61068 (72043b2e-9217-4666-be6f-79923aef2958): online
Resource Group: nps
drbd_exphome_device(heartbeat:drbddisk): Started nps61074
drbd_nz_device(heartbeat:drbddisk): Started nps61074
exphome_filesystem(heartbeat::ocf:Filesystem): Started nps61074
nz_filesystem (heartbeat::ocf:Filesystem): Started nps61074
fabric_ip (heartbeat::ocf:IPaddr): Started nps61074
wall_ip (heartbeat::ocf:IPaddr): Started nps61074
nzinit (lsb:nzinit): Started nps61074
fencing_route_to_ha1(stonith:apcmaster): Started nps61074
fencing_route_to_ha2(stonith:apcmaster): Started nps61068
3. From host 1 (ha1), press Ctrl+C to break out of crm_mon.
4. Turn on heartbeat and DRBD using the chkconfig:
ssh ha2 /sbin/chkconfig drbd on
/sbin/chkconfig drbd on
ssh ha2 /sbin/chkconfig heartbeat on
/sbin/chkconfig heartbeat on
Workarounds and Mitigations
None
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References
Change History
03 Dec 2021: Original Publication
*The CVSS Environment Score is customer environment specific and will ultimately impact the Overall CVSS Score. Customers can evaluate the impact of this vulnerability in their environments by accessing the links in the Reference section of this Security Bulletin.
Disclaimer
Review the IBM security bulletin disclaimer and definitions regarding your responsibilities for assessing potential impact of security vulnerabilities to your environment.
Document Location
Worldwide
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Document Information
Modified date:
06 December 2021
UID
ibm16523732