CVE-2007-2241: Sequence of queries can cause a recursive nameserver to exit
  • 23 May 2013
  • 2 Minutes to read
  • Contributors
  • Dark
    Light
  • PDF

CVE-2007-2241: Sequence of queries can cause a recursive nameserver to exit

  • Dark
    Light
  • PDF

Article Summary

CVE: 

CVE-2007-2241  VU#718460

Posting date: 

30 April 2007

Program Impacted: 

BIND

Versions affected: 

9.4.0 and Alpha releases of 9.5.0

Severity: 

High

Exploitable: 

Remotely

Description:

A sequence of queries can cause a recursive nameserver to exit. While it is unlikely these will occur in normal operation, an attack can use them to cause the affected versions to exit. This attack is a denial of service, and does not allow an attacker to gain control of affected systems.

Workarounds:

Disable recursion ('recursion no;' set in named.conf) if it is not required by your configuration.

Active exploits:

None known at this time.

Solution:  

Upgrade to BIND 9.4.1 or BIND 9.5.0.

Related Documents:

See our BIND Security Matrix for a complete listing of Security Vulnerabilities and versions affected.

If you'd like more information on our Forum or product support please visit www.isc.org/support.

Do you still have questions?   Questions regarding this advisory should go to security-officer@isc.org

Note: ISC patches only currently supported versions. When possible we indicate EOL versions affected. 

ISC Security Vulnerability Disclosure Policy:   Details of our current security advisory policy and practice can be found here: https://www.isc.org/security-vulnerability-disclosure-policy

This Knowledge Base article https://kb.isc.org/article/AA-00919 is the complete and official security advisory document.

Legal Disclaimer: Internet Systems Consortium (ISC) is providing this notice on an "AS IS" basis. No warranty or guarantee of any kind is expressed in this notice and none should be implied. ISC expressly excludes and disclaims any warranties regarding this notice or materials referred to in this notice, including, without limitation, any implied warranty of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, absence of hidden defects, or of non-infringement. Your use or reliance on this notice or materials referred to in this notice is at your own risk. ISC may change this notice at any time.  A stand-alone copy or paraphrase of the text of this document that omits the document URL is an uncontrolled copy. Uncontrolled copies may lack important information, be out of date, or contain factual errors.

© 2001-2018 Internet Systems Consortium For assistance with problems and questions for which you have not been able to find an answer in our Knowledge Base, we recommend searching our community mailing list archives and/or posting your question there (you will need to register there first for your posts to be accepted). The bind-users and the dhcp-users lists particularly have a long-standing and active membership. ISC relies on the financial support of the community to fund the development of its open source software products. If you would like to support future product evolution and maintenance as well having peace of mind knowing that our team of experts are poised to provide you with individual technical assistance whenever you call upon them, then please consider our Professional Subscription Support services - details can be found on our main website.