The probability is the direct output of the EPSS model, and conveys an overall sense of the threat of exploitation in the wild. The percentile measures the EPSS probability relative to all known EPSS scores. Note: This data is updated daily, relying on the latest available EPSS model version. Check out the EPSS documentation for more details.
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Test your applicationsUpgrade cli
to version 1.0.0
or greater, which disables the affected feature.
From the fix release notes:
This feature relies on a beta release (e.g. version 0.5.1) of a Node.js module on npm--one that was superseded by a stable (e.g. version 1.0) release published three years ago [2]. Due to a build-time dependency on the long-since deprecated `node-waf` tool, the module at that version can only be built for Node.js versions 0.8 and below.
Given this, actual usage of this feature is likely very limited. Remove it completely so the integrity of this module's core functionality can be verified.
cli
is an npm package used for rapidly building command line apps.
When used in daemon
mode, the library makes insecure use of two files in the /tmp/
folder: /tmp/<app-name>.pid
and /tmp/<app-name>.log
. These allow an attacker to overwrite files they typically cannot access, but that are accessible by the user running the CLI-using app. This is possible since the /tmp/
folder is (typically) writeable to all system users, and because the names of the files in question are easily predicted by an attacker.
Note that while this is a real vulnerability, it relies on functionality (daemon
mode) which is only supported in very old Node versions (0.8 or older), and so is unlikely to be used by most cli
users. To avoid any doubt, the fixed version (1.0.0) removes support for this feature entirely.
This vulnerability has also been assigned CVE-2016-1000021.
For example, assume user victim occasionally runs a CLI tool called cli-tool
, which uses the cli
package.
If an attacker gains write access to the /tmp/
folder of that machine (but not the higher permissions victim has), they can create the symbolic link /tmp/cli-tool.pid -> /home/victim/important-file
. When victim runs cli-tool
, the important-file
in victim's root directory will be nullified. If the CLI tool is run as root, the same can be done to nullify /etc/passwd
and make the system unbootable.
Note that popular CLI tools have no reason to mask their names, and so attackers can easily guess a long list of tools victims may run by checking the cli
package dependents.