cvrf2cusa/cusas/p/python3/python3-3.9.9-16_openEuler-SA-2022-2097.json
Jia Chao 0b84f3c661 增加测试用的配置和目录
Signed-off-by: Jia Chao <jiac13@chinaunicom.cn>
2024-07-02 15:51:55 +08:00

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{
"id": "openEuler-SA-2022-2097",
"url": "https://www.openeuler.org/zh/security/security-bulletins/detail/?id=openEuler-SA-2022-2097",
"title": "An update for python3 is now available for openEuler-22.03-LTS",
"severity": "Important",
"description": "Python combines remarkable power with very clear syntax. It has modules, classes, exceptions, very high level dynamic data types, and dynamic typing. There are interfaces to many system calls and libraries, as well as to various windowing systems. New built-in modules are easily written in C or C++ (or other languages, depending on the chosen implementation). Python is also usable as an extension language for applications written in other languages that need easy-to-use scripting or automation interfaces. This package Provides python version 3.\r\n\r\nSecurity Fix(es):\r\n\r\nPython 3.9.x and 3.10.x through 3.10.8 on Linux allows local privilege escalation in a non-default configuration. The Python multiprocessing library, when used with the forkserver start method on Linux, allows pickles to be deserialized from any user in the same machine local network namespace, which in many system configurations means any user on the same machine. Pickles can execute arbitrary code. Thus, this allows for local user privilege escalation to the user that any forkserver process is running as. Setting multiprocessing.util.abstract_sockets_supported to False is a workaround. The forkserver start method for multiprocessing is not the default start method. This issue is Linux specific because only Linux supports abstract namespace sockets. CPython before 3.9 does not make use of Linux abstract namespace sockets by default. Support for users manually specifying an abstract namespace socket was added as a bugfix in 3.7.8 and 3.8.4, but users would need to make specific uncommon API calls in order to do that in CPython before 3.9.(CVE-2022-42919)",
"cves": [
{
"id": "CVE-2022-42919",
"url": "https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2022-42919",
"severity": "Important"
}
]
}