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A 7-Year-Old Samba Flaw Lets Hackers Access Thousands of Linux PCs Remotely

7 year old SambaCry  flaw


We all think that Linux is the most securest OS right now. But it's not!


What is Samba :- 












Is this Linux version of EternalBlue Exploit?



Linux version of EternalBlue Exploit












Exploit Code Released



simple.create_pipe("/path/to/target.so")
However, the Samba exploit has already been ported to Metasploit, a penetration testing framework, enabling researchers as well as hackers to exploit this flaw easily.


Patch and Mitigations


The maintainers of Samba has already patched the issue in their new versions Samba versions 4.6.4/4.5.10/4.4.14, and are urging those using a vulnerable version of Samba to install the patch as soon as possible.

But if you can not upgrade to the latest versions of Samba immediately, you can work around the vulnerability by adding the following line to your Samba configuration file smb.conf:
nt pipe support = no
Once added, restart the network's SMB daemon (smbd) and you are done. This change will prevent clients from fully accessing some network machines, as well as disable some expected functions for connected Windows systems.

While Linux distribution vendors, including Red Hat and Ubuntu, have already released patched versions for its users, the larger risk is that from NAS device consumers that might not be updated as quickly.

Craig Williams of Cisco said that given the fact that most NAS devices run Samba and have very valuable data, the vulnerability "has potential to be the first large-scale Linux ransomware worm."

Update: Samba maintainers have also provided patches for older and unsupported versions of Samba.

Meanwhile, Netgear released a security advisory for CVE-2017-7494, saying a large number of its routers and NAS product models are affected by the flaw because they use Samba version 3.5.0 or later.

However, the company currently released firmware fixes for only ReadyNAS products running OS 6.x.







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