• @Laser@feddit.de
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      2 months ago

      Debian is not really the problem, but rather the target, just read the original announcement at https://www.openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2024/03/29/4:

      == Affected Systems ==
      Running as part of a debian or RPM package build:
      if test -f "$srcdir/debian/rules" || test "x$RPM_ARCH" = "xx86_64";then
      ...
      openssh does not directly use liblzma. However debian and several other
      distributions patch openssh to support systemd notification, and libsystemd
      does depend on lzma.
      
      
      Initially starting sshd outside of systemd did not show the slowdown, despite
      the backdoor briefly getting invoked. This appears to be part of some
      countermeasures to make analysis harder.
      
      Observed requirements for the exploit:
      a) TERM environment variable is not set
      b) argv[0] needs to be /usr/sbin/sshd
      c) LD_DEBUG, LD_PROFILE are not set
      d) LANG needs to be set
      e) Some debugging environments, like rr, appear to be detected. Plain gdb
         appears to be detected in some situations, but not others
      

      So if you were using Arch, you were unaffected by this vulnerability because

      • the script wouldn’t trigger because it uses neither DEB nor RPM packages
      • even if it had triggered, the backdoor only gets activated when the calling binary is /usr/sbin/sshdwhich doesn’t happen in Arch because they don’t patch OpenSSH to support systemd (which in turn pulls in xz).

      This doesn’t mean that Arch saved you because it’s super secure or anything, but this was a supply chain attack that hit Arch (and Debian Sid, where the backdoor was actually caught because ssh logins took so long…), but it didn’t trigger because it wasn’t targeted.

      Meaning there’s no immediate need to be concerned, but you should update ASAP even though the Arch package probably doesn’t contain backdoored artifacts.