May 2018 Git Security Vulnerability

Published on by

CVE 2018-11235 is a new industry-wide security vulnerability in Git that can lead to arbitrary code execution when a user operates in a malicious repository. In the announcement, Edward Thomson describes the vulenerability:

A remote repository may contain a definition for a submodule, and also bundle that submodule’s repository data, checked in to the parent repository as a folder. When recursively cloning this repository, git will first checkout the parent repository into the working directory, then prepare to clone the submodule. It will then realize that it doesn’t need to do the clone – the submodule’s repository already exists on disk; since it was checked in to the parent, it was written to the working directory when it was checked out. Therefore git can skip the fetch and simply check out the submodule using the repository that’s on disk.

The problem is that when you git clone a repository, there is some important configuration that you don’t get from the server. This includes the contents of the .git/config file, and things like hooks, which are scripts that will be run at certain points within the git workflow. For example, the post-checkout hook will be run anytime git checks files out into the working directory.

This configuration is not cloned from the remote server because that would open a dangerous vulnerability: that a remote server could provide you code that you would then execute on your computer.

Unfortunately, with this submodule configuration vulnerability, that’s exactly what happens. Since the submodule’s repository is checked in to the parent repository, it’s never actually cloned. The submodule repository can therefore actually have a hook already configured. If when you recursively cloned (and this repository does have to be cloned with --recursive for this vulnerability to manifest) this carefully crafted malicious parent repository, it will first check out the parent, then read the submodule’s checked-in repository in order to write the submodule to the working directory, and finally it will execute any post-checkout hooks that are configured in the submodule’s checked-in repository.

It is recommended that everyone upgrade their version of Git and Git 2.17.1 has been released to address this as well as Git for Windows 2.17.1 (2).


Thanks to SSXIO for the hat tip.

Eric L. Barnes photo

Eric is the creator of Laravel News and has been covering Laravel since 2012.

Filed in:
Cube

Laravel Newsletter

Join 40k+ other developers and never miss out on new tips, tutorials, and more.

image
No Compromises

Join the Mastering Laravel community to level up your skills and get trusted advice

Visit No Compromises

Laravel Forge

Easily create and manage your servers and deploy your Laravel applications in seconds.

Laravel Forge

Tinkerwell

The must-have code runner for Laravel developers. Tinker with AI, autocompletion and instant feedback on local and production environments.

Tinkerwell
No Compromises logo

No Compromises

Joel and Aaron, the two seasoned devs from the No Compromises podcast, are now available to hire for your Laravel project. ⬧ Flat rate of $7500/mo. ⬧ No lengthy sales process. ⬧ No contracts. ⬧ 100% money back guarantee.

No Compromises

Kirschbaum

Providing innovation and stability to ensure your web application succeeds.

Kirschbaum
Shift logo

Shift

Running an old Laravel version? Instant, automated Laravel upgrades and code modernization to keep your applications fresh.

Shift

Bacancy

Supercharge your project with a seasoned Laravel developer with 4-6 years of experience for just $2500/month. Get 160 hours of dedicated expertise & a risk-free 15-day trial. Schedule a call now!

Bacancy

Lucky Media

Bespoke software solutions built for your business. We ♥ Laravel

Lucky Media

Lunar: Laravel E-Commerce

E-Commerce for Laravel. An open-source package that brings the power of modern headless e-commerce functionality to Laravel.

Lunar: Laravel E-Commerce

LaraJobs

The official Laravel job board

LaraJobs

Larafast: Laravel SaaS Starter Kit

Larafast is a Laravel SaaS Starter Kit with ready-to-go features for Payments, Auth, Admin, Blog, SEO, and beautiful themes. Available with Vue and Livewire stacks.

Larafast: Laravel SaaS Starter Kit

SaaSykit: Laravel SaaS Starter Kit

SaaSykit is a Laravel SaaS Starter Kit that comes with all features required to run a modern SaaS. Payments, Beautiful Checkout, Admin Panel, User dashboard, Auth, Ready Components, Stats, Blog, Docs and more.

SaaSykit: Laravel SaaS Starter Kit

Rector

Your partner for seamless Laravel upgrades, cutting costs, and accelerating innovation for successful companies

Rector

The latest

View all →

Asserting a JSON Response Structure in Laravel

Read article

Backpack turns 8 years old, celebrates with 40% discount

Read article

Create a DateTime from a Timestamp With this New Method Coming to PHP 8.4

Read article

Neovim Plugin to for Navigating Laravel and Livewire Components

Read article

Laravel Herd v1.7 is out with updates to the dump UI

Read article

Share Error Package for Laravel's New Exception Page

Read article