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chore(deps): update module github.com/docker/docker to v24 [security] - autoclosed #95

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@renovate renovate bot commented Feb 19, 2024

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This PR contains the following updates:

Package Change Age Adoption Passing Confidence
github.com/docker/docker v20.10.26+incompatible -> v24.0.9+incompatible age adoption passing confidence

/sys/devices/virtual/powercap accessible by default to containers

GHSA-jq35-85cj-fj4p

More information

Details

Intel's RAPL (Running Average Power Limit) feature, introduced by the Sandy Bridge microarchitecture, provides software insights into hardware energy consumption. To facilitate this, Intel introduced the powercap framework in Linux kernel 3.13, which reads values via relevant MSRs (model specific registers) and provides unprivileged userspace access via sysfs. As RAPL is an interface to access a hardware feature, it is only available when running on bare metal with the module compiled into the kernel.

By 2019, it was realized that in some cases unprivileged access to RAPL readings could be exploited as a power-based side-channel against security features including AES-NI (potentially inside a SGX enclave) and KASLR (kernel address space layout randomization). Also known as the PLATYPUS attack, Intel assigned CVE-2020-8694 and CVE-2020-8695, and AMD assigned CVE-2020-12912.

Several mitigations were applied; Intel reduced the sampling resolution via a microcode update, and the Linux kernel prevents access by non-root users since 5.10. However, this kernel-based mitigation does not apply to many container-based scenarios:

  • Unless using user namespaces, root inside a container has the same level of privilege as root outside the container, but with a slightly more narrow view of the system
  • sysfs is mounted inside containers read-only; however only read access is needed to carry out this attack on an unpatched CPU

While this is not a direct vulnerability in container runtimes, defense in depth and safe defaults are valuable and preferred, especially as this poses a risk to multi-tenant container environments running directly on affected hardware. This is provided by masking /sys/devices/virtual/powercap in the default mount configuration, and adding an additional set of rules to deny it in the default AppArmor profile.

While sysfs is not the only way to read from the RAPL subsystem, other ways of accessing it require additional capabilities such as CAP_SYS_RAWIO which is not available to containers by default, or perf paranoia level less than 1, which is a non-default kernel tunable.

References

Severity

Moderate

References

This data is provided by OSV and the GitHub Advisory Database (CC-BY 4.0).


Moby's external DNS requests from 'internal' networks could lead to data exfiltration

CVE-2024-29018 / GHSA-mq39-4gv4-mvpx / GO-2024-2659

More information

Details

Moby is an open source container framework originally developed by Docker Inc. as Docker. It is a key component of Docker Engine, Docker Desktop, and other distributions of container tooling or runtimes. As a batteries-included container runtime, Moby comes with a built-in networking implementation that enables communication between containers, and between containers and external resources.

Moby's networking implementation allows for creating and using many networks, each with their own subnet and gateway. This feature is frequently referred to as custom networks, as each network can have a different driver, set of parameters, and thus behaviors. When creating a network, the --internal flag is used to designate a network as internal. The internal attribute in a docker-compose.yml file may also be used to mark a network internal, and other API clients may specify the internal parameter as well.

When containers with networking are created, they are assigned unique network interfaces and IP addresses (typically from a non-routable RFC 1918 subnet). The root network namespace (hereafter referred to as the 'host') serves as a router for non-internal networks, with a gateway IP that provides SNAT/DNAT to/from container IPs.

Containers on an internal network may communicate between each other, but are precluded from communicating with any networks the host has access to (LAN or WAN) as no default route is configured, and firewall rules are set up to drop all outgoing traffic. Communication with the gateway IP address (and thus appropriately configured host services) is possible, and the host may communicate with any container IP directly.

In addition to configuring the Linux kernel's various networking features to enable container networking, dockerd directly provides some services to container networks. Principal among these is serving as a resolver, enabling service discovery (looking up other containers on the network by name), and resolution of names from an upstream resolver.

When a DNS request for a name that does not correspond to a container is received, the request is forwarded to the configured upstream resolver (by default, the host's configured resolver). This request is made from the container network namespace: the level of access and routing of traffic is the same as if the request was made by the container itself.

As a consequence of this design, containers solely attached to internal network(s) will be unable to resolve names using the upstream resolver, as the container itself is unable to communicate with that nameserver. Only the names of containers also attached to the internal network are able to be resolved.

Many systems will run a local forwarding DNS resolver, typically present on a loopback address (127.0.0.0/8), such as systemd-resolved or dnsmasq. Common loopback address examples include 127.0.0.1 or 127.0.0.53. As the host and any containers have separate loopback devices, a consequence of the design described above is that containers are unable to resolve names from the host's configured resolver, as they cannot reach these addresses on the host loopback device.

To bridge this gap, and to allow containers to properly resolve names even when a local forwarding resolver is used on a loopback address, dockerd will detect this scenario and instead forward DNS requests from the host/root network namespace. The loopback resolver will then forward the requests to its configured upstream resolvers, as expected.

Impact

Because dockerd will forward DNS requests to the host loopback device, bypassing the container network namespace's normal routing semantics entirely, internal networks can unexpectedly forward DNS requests to an external nameserver.

By registering a domain for which they control the authoritative nameservers, an attacker could arrange for a compromised container to exfiltrate data by encoding it in DNS queries that will eventually be answered by their nameservers. For example, if the domain evil.example was registered, the authoritative nameserver(s) for that domain could (eventually and indirectly) receive a request for this-is-a-secret.evil.example.

Docker Desktop is not affected, as Docker Desktop always runs an internal resolver on a RFC 1918 address.

Patches

Moby releases 26.0.0-rc3, 25.0.5 (released) and 23.0.11 (to be released) are patched to prevent forwarding DNS requests from internal networks.

Workarounds
  • Run containers intended to be solely attached to internal networks with a custom upstream address (--dns argument to docker run, or API equivalent), which will force all upstream DNS queries to be resolved from the container network namespace.
Background
  • yair zak originally reported this issue to the Docker security team.
  • PR https://togithub.com/moby/moby/pull/46609 was opened in public to fix this issue, as it was not originally considered to have a security implication.
  • The official documentation claims that "the --internal flag that will completely isolate containers on a network from any communications external to that network," which necessitated this advisory and CVE.

Severity

  • CVSS Score: 5.9 / 10 (Medium)
  • Vector String: CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:H/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:N/A:N

References

This data is provided by OSV and the GitHub Advisory Database (CC-BY 4.0).


Classic builder cache poisoning

CVE-2024-24557 / GHSA-xw73-rw38-6vjc

More information

Details

The classic builder cache system is prone to cache poisoning if the image is built FROM scratch.
Also, changes to some instructions (most important being HEALTHCHECK and ONBUILD) would not cause a cache miss.

An attacker with the knowledge of the Dockerfile someone is using could poison their cache by making them pull a specially crafted image that would be considered as a valid cache candidate for some build steps.

For example, an attacker could create an image that is considered as a valid cache candidate for:

FROM scratch
MAINTAINER Pawel

when in fact the malicious image used as a cache would be an image built from a different Dockerfile.

In the second case, the attacker could for example substitute a different HEALTCHECK command.

Impact

23.0+ users are only affected if they explicitly opted out of Buildkit (DOCKER_BUILDKIT=0 environment variable) or are using the /build API endpoint (which uses the classic builder by default).

All users on versions older than 23.0 could be impacted. An example could be a CI with a shared cache, or just a regular Docker user pulling a malicious image due to misspelling/typosquatting.

Image build API endpoint (/build) and ImageBuild function from github.com/docker/docker/client is also affected as it the uses classic builder by default.

Patches

Patches are included in Moby releases:

  • v25.0.2
  • v24.0.9
Workarounds
  • Use --no-cache or use Buildkit if possible (DOCKER_BUILDKIT=1, it's default on 23.0+ assuming that the buildx plugin is installed).
  • Use Version = types.BuilderBuildKit or NoCache = true in ImageBuildOptions for ImageBuild call.

Severity

  • CVSS Score: 6.9 / 10 (Medium)
  • Vector String: CVSS:3.1/AV:L/AC:H/PR:N/UI:R/S:C/C:L/I:H/A:L

References

This data is provided by OSV and the GitHub Advisory Database (CC-BY 4.0).


Release Notes

docker/docker (github.com/docker/docker)

v24.0.9+incompatible

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v24.0.8+incompatible

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v24.0.7+incompatible

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v24.0.6+incompatible

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v24.0.5+incompatible

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v24.0.4+incompatible

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v24.0.3+incompatible

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v24.0.2+incompatible

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v24.0.1+incompatible

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v24.0.0+incompatible

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v23.0.10+incompatible

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v23.0.9+incompatible

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v23.0.8+incompatible

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v23.0.7+incompatible

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v23.0.6+incompatible

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v23.0.5+incompatible

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v23.0.4+incompatible

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v23.0.3+incompatible

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v23.0.2+incompatible

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v23.0.1+incompatible

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v23.0.0+incompatible

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v20.10.27+incompatible

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Configuration

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🚦 Automerge: Disabled by config. Please merge this manually once you are satisfied.

Rebasing: Whenever PR becomes conflicted, or you tick the rebase/retry checkbox.

🔕 Ignore: Close this PR and you won't be reminded about this update again.


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This PR has been generated by Mend Renovate. View repository job log here.

@renovate renovate bot requested a review from a team as a code owner February 19, 2024 18:09
@renovate renovate bot added the security label Feb 19, 2024
@renovate renovate bot force-pushed the renovate/go-github.com/docker/docker-vulnerability branch from dc67a6a to d955145 Compare March 21, 2024 08:14
@renovate renovate bot changed the title chore(deps): update module github.com/docker/docker to v20.10.27+incompatible [security] chore(deps): update module github.com/docker/docker to v24 [security] Mar 21, 2024
@renovate renovate bot force-pushed the renovate/go-github.com/docker/docker-vulnerability branch from d955145 to 6a76205 Compare April 4, 2024 20:29
@renovate renovate bot changed the title chore(deps): update module github.com/docker/docker to v24 [security] chore(deps): update module github.com/docker/docker to v24 [security] - autoclosed Apr 18, 2024
@renovate renovate bot closed this Apr 18, 2024
@renovate renovate bot deleted the renovate/go-github.com/docker/docker-vulnerability branch April 18, 2024 18:53
@renovate renovate bot changed the title chore(deps): update module github.com/docker/docker to v24 [security] - autoclosed chore(deps): update module github.com/docker/docker to v24 [security] Apr 19, 2024
@renovate renovate bot reopened this Apr 19, 2024
@renovate renovate bot restored the renovate/go-github.com/docker/docker-vulnerability branch April 19, 2024 08:37
@renovate renovate bot force-pushed the renovate/go-github.com/docker/docker-vulnerability branch from 6a76205 to aa35dd1 Compare April 19, 2024 08:38
@renovate renovate bot changed the title chore(deps): update module github.com/docker/docker to v24 [security] chore(deps): update module github.com/docker/docker to v24 [security] - autoclosed Apr 29, 2024
@renovate renovate bot closed this Apr 29, 2024
@renovate renovate bot deleted the renovate/go-github.com/docker/docker-vulnerability branch April 29, 2024 16:04
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