USN-275-1: Mozilla vulnerabilities
28 April 2006
Mozilla vulnerabilities
Releases
Details
Web pages with extremely long titles caused subsequent launches of
Mozilla browser to hang for up to a few minutes, or caused Mozilla to
crash on computers with insufficient memory. (CVE-2005-4134)
Igor Bukanov discovered that the JavaScript engine did not properly
declare some temporary variables. Under some rare circumstances, a
malicious website could exploit this to execute arbitrary code with
the privileges of the user. (CVE-2006-0292, CVE-2006-1742)
The function XULDocument.persist() did not sufficiently validate the
names of attributes. An attacker could exploit this to inject
arbitrary XML code into the file 'localstore.rdf', which is read and
evaluated at startup. This could include JavaScript commands that
would be run with the user's privileges. (CVE-2006-0296)
Due to a flaw in the HTML tag parser a specific sequence of HTML tags
caused memory corruption. A malicious web site could exploit this to
crash the browser or even execute arbitrary code with the user's
privileges. (CVE-2006-0748)
An invalid ordering of table-related tags caused Mozilla to use a
negative array index. A malicious website could exploit this to
execute arbitrary code with the privileges of the user.
(CVE-2006-0749)
Georgi Guninski discovered that embedded XBL scripts of web sites
could escalate their (normally reduced) privileges to get full
privileges of the user if that page is viewed with "Print Preview".
(CVE-2006-1727)
The crypto.generateCRMFRequest() function had a flaw which could be
exploited to run arbitrary code with the user's privileges.
(CVE-2006-1728)
Claus Jørgensen and Jesse Ruderman discovered that a text input box
could be pre-filled with a filename and then turned into a file-upload
control with the contents intact. A malicious web site could exploit
this to read any local file the user has read privileges for.
(CVE-2006-1729)
An integer overflow was detected in the handling of the CSS property
"letter-spacing". A malicious web site could exploit this to run
arbitrary code with the user's privileges. (CVE-2006-1730)
The methods valueOf.call() and .valueOf.apply() returned an object
whose privileges were not properly confined to those of the caller,
which made them vulnerable to cross-site scripting attacks. A
malicious web site could exploit this to modify the contents or steal
confidential data (such as passwords) from other opened web pages.
(CVE-2006-1731) The window.controllers array variable (CVE-2006-1732)
and event handlers (CVE-2006-1741) were vulnerable to a similar attack.
The privileged built-in XBL bindings were not fully protected from web
content and could be accessed by calling valueOf.call() and
valueOf.apply() on a method of that binding. A malicious web site
could exploit this to run arbitrary JavaScript code with the user's
privileges. (CVE-2006-1733)
It was possible to use the Object.watch() method to access an internal
function object (the "clone parent"). A malicious web site could
exploit this to execute arbitrary JavaScript code with the user's
privileges. (CVE-2006-1734)
By calling the XBL.method.eval() method in a special way it was
possible to create JavaScript functions that would get compiled with
the wrong privileges. A malicious web site could exploit this to
execute arbitrary JavaScript code with the user's privileges.
(CVE-2006-1735)
Michael Krax discovered that by layering a transparent image link to
an executable on top of a visible (and presumably desirable) image a
malicious site could fool the user to right-click and choose "Save
image as..." from the context menu, which would download the
executable instead of the image. (CVE-2006-1736)
Several crashes have been fixed which could be triggered by web sites
and involve memory corruption. These could potentially be exploited to
execute arbitrary code with the user's privileges. (CVE-2006-1737,
CVE-2006-1738, CVE-2006-1739, CVE-2006-1790)
If the user has turned on the "Entering secure site" modal warning
dialog, it was possible to spoof the browser's secure-site indicators
(the lock icon and the gold URL field background) by first loading the
target secure site in a pop-up window, then changing its location to a
different site, which retained the displayed secure-browsing
indicators from the original site. (CVE-2006-1740)
Update instructions
The problem can be corrected by updating your system to the following package versions:
Ubuntu 5.10
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mozilla-psm
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mozilla-mailnews
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mozilla-browser
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Ubuntu 5.04
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mozilla-psm
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mozilla-mailnews
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mozilla-browser
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Ubuntu 4.10
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mozilla-psm
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mozilla-mailnews
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mozilla-browser
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In general, a standard system update will make all the necessary changes.
References
- CVE-2006-1736
- CVE-2005-4134
- CVE-2006-1729
- CVE-2006-1740
- CVE-2006-0292
- CVE-2006-0296
- CVE-2006-0748
- CVE-2006-0749
- CVE-2006-1727
- CVE-2006-1728
- CVE-2006-1730
- CVE-2006-1731
- CVE-2006-1732
- CVE-2006-1733
- CVE-2006-1734
- CVE-2006-1735
- CVE-2006-1737
- CVE-2006-1738
- CVE-2006-1739
- CVE-2006-1741
- CVE-2006-1742
- CVE-2006-1790