CVSS2
Attack Vector
NETWORK
Attack Complexity
HIGH
Authentication
NONE
Confidentiality Impact
COMPLETE
Integrity Impact
COMPLETE
Availability Impact
COMPLETE
AV:N/AC:H/Au:N/C:C/I:C/A:C
EPSS
Percentile
91.0%
CentOS Errata and Security Advisory CESA-2015:1417
Mailman is a program used to help manage e-mail discussion lists.
It was found that mailman did not sanitize the list name before passing it
to certain MTAs. A local attacker could use this flaw to execute arbitrary
code as the user running mailman. (CVE-2015-2775)
It was found that mailman stored private email messages in a world-readable
directory. A local user could use this flaw to read private mailing list
archives. (CVE-2002-0389)
This update also fixes the following bugs:
Previously, it was impossible to configure Mailman in a way that
Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting & Conformance (DMARC) would
recognize Sender alignment for Domain Key Identified Mail (DKIM)
signatures. Consequently, Mailman list subscribers that belonged to a mail
server with a “reject” policy for DMARC, such as yahoo.com or AOL.com, were
unable to receive Mailman forwarded messages from senders residing in any
domain that provided DKIM signatures. With this update, domains with a
“reject” DMARC policy are recognized correctly, and Mailman list
administrators are able to configure the way these messages are handled.
As a result, after a proper configuration, subscribers now correctly
receive Mailman forwarded messages in this scenario. (BZ#1095359)
Mailman used a console encoding when generating a subject for a “welcome
email” when new mailing lists were created by the “newlist” command.
Consequently, when the console encoding did not match the encoding used by
Mailman for that particular language, characters in the “welcome email”
could be displayed incorrectly. Mailman has been fixed to use the correct
encoding, and characters in the “welcome email” are now displayed properly.
(BZ#1056366)
The “rmlist” command used a hardcoded path to list data based on the
VAR_PREFIX configuration variable. As a consequence, when the list was
created outside of VAR_PREFIX, it was impossible to remove it using the
“rmlist” command. With this update, the “rmlist” command uses the correct
LIST_DATA_DIR value instead of VAR_PREFIX, and it is now possible to remove
the list in described situation. (BZ#1008139)
Due to an incompatibility between Python and Mailman in Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 6, when moderators were approving a moderated message to a
mailing list and checked the “Preserve messages for the site administrator”
checkbox, Mailman failed to approve the message and returned an error.
This incompatibility has been fixed, and Mailman now approves messages as
expected in this scenario. (BZ#765807)
When Mailman was set to not archive a list but the archive was not set to
private, attachments sent to that list were placed in a public archive.
Consequently, users of Mailman web interface could list private attachments
because httpd configuration of public archive directory allows listing all
files in the archive directory. The httpd configuration of Mailman has been
fixed to not allow listing of private archive directory, and users of
Mailman web interface are no longer able to list private attachments.
(BZ#745409)
Users of mailman are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which
contain backported patches to correct these issues.
Merged security bulletin from advisories:
https://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos-cr-announce/2015-July/028282.html
Affected packages:
mailman
Upstream details at:
https://access.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2015:1417
OS | Version | Architecture | Package | Version | Filename |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CentOS | 6 | i686 | mailman | < 2.1.12-25.el6 | mailman-2.1.12-25.el6.i686.rpm |
CentOS | 6 | x86_64 | mailman | < 2.1.12-25.el6 | mailman-2.1.12-25.el6.x86_64.rpm |