Confluence 3.5 : Confluence Security Advisory 2009-06-01
This page last changed on Aug 10, 2009 by cmiller.
In this advisory: XSS Vulnerability in Various Confluence Actions and MacrosSeverityAtlassian rates these vulnerabilities as high, according to the scale published in Confluence Security. The scale allows us to rank a vulnerability as critical, high, moderate or low. Risk AssessmentWe have identified and fixed a number of security flaws which may affect Confluence instances in a public environment. These are cross-site scripting (XSS) that affect various Confluence page/blog features and functions.
You can read more about XSS attacks at cgisecurity, CERT and other places on the web. Risk MitigationWe recommend either patching or upgrading your Confluence installation to fix these vulnerabilities. Please see the 'Fix' section below. Alternatively, if you are not in a position to undertake this immediately and you judge it necessary, you can disable public access (e.g. anonymous access and public sign-on) to your wiki until you have applied the necessary patch or upgrade. For even tighter control, you could restrict access to trusted groups. VulnerabilityA hacker can inject their own JavaScript into various Confluence URLs — see the table below for the affected functional areas. A URL may be invoked when a user performs a specific function in Confluence, such as clicking a link or a button. The URL can also be invoked by simply entering it into the browser address bar. If rogue JavaScript is injected into such a URL, the JavaScript will be executed when a user invokes the URL. For more details please refer to the related JIRA issue, also shown in the table below.
* This vulnerability may be present in earlier Confluence versions with the Office Connector plugin installed. FixThese issues have been fixed in Confluence 3.0 (see the release notes), which you can download from the download centre. If you do not wish to upgrade to Confluence 3.0, you can download and install the patches provided on our JIRA site. You will need to upgrade to the latest point release for the major version of Confluence that you are running (e.g. if you are running Confluence 2.9, you will need to upgrade to version 2.9.2) and then apply the patches. For more information, please refer to the specific JIRA issues shown in the table of vulnerabilities above. |
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Document generated by Confluence on Mar 16, 2011 18:29 |