netscape bug

Perry E. Metzger perry at piermont.com
Wed Sep 20 13:04:05 PDT 1995



"Vladimir Z. Nuri" writes:
> none of the articles mention that the cracker must have login access
> to the computer that the random numbers are generated on. is this true?
> does the code require knowledge of the PID etc. that can only be obtained
> by a login to the system that the netscape session is running on?

You can guess the PID without much trouble -- they are 15 bit numbers.

> P.M. notes that anywhere there is a data-driven buffer overflow (which
> he suspects are all over netscape) he can get code to execute anything
> he wants. this reminds me of the
> Morris internet worm that ran exactly the same way.

That was one of the first wide exploits of the trick, yes.

> my question: I have not seen the specifics of how this works. does
> this require specialized knowledge of the native machine language on the 
> host machine?

Yes. However, its very straightforward to do.

The recent syslog(3) problem was of this nature, by the way.

Perry






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