Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 6 Next »

This is the advisory page for Identity Provider V5 releases. For IdP plugins supported by the project, see the plugins home page. For older IdP advisories, please refer to the V4 IDP SecurityAdvisories page.

For the SP, please refer to V3 SP SecurityAdvisories page.

As a courtesy, you can also find Jetty advisories at https://www.eclipse.org/jetty/security-reports.html and Tomcat advisories at http://tomcat.apache.org/security.html

This page provides access to the complete history of Security Advisories released for the Shibboleth V5 Identity Provider and an "at a glance" table showing you which releases are vulnerable to what kinds of issues. If you're running a particular version, you can use this table to identify the issues that could affect your system and determine how urgent an upgrade is. In addition to the announce mailing list, you can "watch" this page for changes to keep abreast.

You can determine the exact version you're running based on the process log during startup.

If you would like to report an issue you believe is security related, please drop an e-mail to security@shibboleth.net

As always, sites are advised to use the latest stable release of any Shibboleth product. Refer to the ProductVersioning page for information about our support and versioning policies. The Home page identifies the specific versions recommended at a given point in time

This page only covers advisories affecting the V5 Identity Provider software. Other advisories are not listed here, but you can find the complete set of advisories in this directory.

Obviously not all vulnerabilities are created equal, and the classifications in the matrices are general in nature, and are meant to point you to the relevant advisories to look into.

A particular version will typically be implicated by any advisories noted for it and for any newer versions above it in the tables.

Advisories noted for "All" versions should be reviewed by all deployers for relevancy to their deployment. Typically this indicates that an advisory is at least partly discussing issues that go beyond the scope of what the Shibboleth software can actually remediate and may affect the deployment as a whole. It does not in general refer to unfixed vulnerabilities in the Shibboleth software itself.

Identity Provider Vulnerability Matrix

The oldest IdP 5 version unaffected by fixable vulnerabilities is 5.0.0

Version

EOL

User Data Exposure

User Data Accuracy

Session Hijacking

Denial of Service

Remote Exploit

Advisories

All

X

X

X

2018-01-23, 2017-05-18

5.0.0

Advisory List

Date

Title

Affects

Severity

CVE

2018-01-23

Implications of ROBOT TLS vulnerability

All

high

2017-05-18

Default Kerberos configurations are unsafe

All

high

Library Issues

Because we have relatively infrequent releases and a strict versioning policy, it is not rare that we ship third-party libraries that may contain unfixed vulnerabilities when those issues are believed to be non-impactful. This is often due to timing; for example, we may be unable to adequately test a new version of something in time to include it in a release and may determine that the less risky course is to stay on an older version. Alternatively, it may be impossible to update something because of the API changes required, since many projects do not adhere to semantic (or any) versioning.

In the event that we ship releases known to, or that we subsequently discover to, contain vulnerable libraries and do not have specific plans to immediately issue a patch with a newer version, we will document any known issues here, and our official position as to the lack of relevance of the issue to the software. It is not our aim to pass generic, context-free scanners that simply flag every issue. Automation is not a substitute for human judgement.

V5.0.0

  • Guava (any) (CVE-2020-8908)

    • We don't use the affected, deprecated function, and there is no fix for the issue.

  • Apache Commons compress (CVE-2023-42503)

    • We do use the affected feature to handle plugin installation, however we enforce signature checking before we unpack anything, so exploiting this woould require deliberately accepting a signed file from an untrusted actor, and the threat of an “offline” denial of service is not significant as a running IdP would not be not impacted. We will patch this in a future release.

  • Spring Framework (CVE-2023-34053)

    • We do not install the necessary “ObservationRegistry” allowing the exploit to occur (and it is only a DoS in any event). We will patch this in a future release.

  • Spring Framework (CVE-2024-22233)

    • We do not include or recommend the use of Spring Security in our software; however, deployers could choose to add it themselves, and would then be vulnerable to this issue. It is however a denial of service issue only.

  • logback < 1.4.12 (CVE-2023-6378)

    • The issue impacts an unusual feature of logback allowing remote collection of log events and the bug exists in the “receiver” component. Thus, the IdP’s use of logback would not involve this feature. We will patch this in a future release.

  • No labels