100% of the Java SE flaws in the Oracle July 2018 Critical Patch Update (CPU) can be exploited remotely
The Oracle July 2018 Critical Patch Update (CPU) fixes eight (8) Java SE-related vulnerabilities, all of which can be remotely exploited by hackers without user credentials. Five (5) new critical Java vulnerabilities were also fixed in the WebLogic Server, all of which are remotely exploitable without authentication.
Other highlights from the release include:
- The Q3 release patches flaws in Java SE versions 6u191, 7u181, 8u172, and 10.0.1. CVE-2018-2972 affects Java 10 and CVE-2018-2942 affects deployments on Windows.
- Half of the Java SE flaws affect server deployments and half affect client-side deployments. 75% of the Java SE vulnerabilities affect a system’s confidentiality and 75% affect system availability.
- This CPU fixes more new deserialization vulnerabilities in the JDK.
Application Functionality is at Risk
Several actions taken to fix Java SE vulnerabilities in the July CPU are likely to break the functionality of certain applications. Application owners who apply binary patches should be extremely cautious and thoroughly test their applications before putting patches into production.
The risks of the July updates breaking functionality include:
- The fix for the most critical Java SE vulnerability in the July CPU – CVE-2018-2938 – removes the vulnerable component (Java DB) from the JDK. Users that depend on this component must manually obtain the latest Apache Derby artifacts and rebuild their applications.
Waratek Patch customer are unaffected by this JDK component removal. Waratek Patch customers can obtain the virtual patch for CVE-2018-2938 from Waratek, eliminating the need to obtain the latest Apache Derby artifacts and rebuild their applications. Waratek virtual patches are applied in real-time with no downtime or source code changes.
- The July CPU release changes the algorithms used in endpoint identification on LDAPs. Applications that use LDAP over TLS connections may stop functioning properly. If backwards combability issues arise, Oracle recommends to disable endpoint identification using a new system property:
com.sun.jndi.ldap.object.disableEndpointIdentification.
Waratek Patch customers are not affected by this potentially backwards incompatible change of the JDK.
- New deserialization controls in the JDK limit the object creation phase of deserialization. These new security controls may break reflective frameworks that make use of JDK-internal APIs. These security checks can be disabled to allow these reflective frameworks to work normally by setting the system disableSerialConstructorChecks to the value “true”.
By disabling these security checks, attackers can potentially exploit this attack vector.
Waratek Enterprise users are already protected against this deserialization attack vector while allowing reflective frameworks to work as expected.
- WebLogic is still plagued by Java deserialization vulnerabilities (CVE-2018-7489& CVE-2018-2893). Note that there are claims by a security researcher on Twitter that more zero-day Remote Command Execution (RCE) deserialization vulnerabilities have been reported to Oracle for WebLogic that were not fixed in the July CPU.
Waratek Enterprise users are already protected against these new deserialization vulnerabilities in WebLogic.
For more information about how the July 2018 Oracle Critical Patch Update may impact your applications or how we can help patch and protect your applications with no downtime or source code changes, please contact Waratek.
About Waratek
Waratek is a pioneer in the next generation of application security solutions. Using patented technology, Waratek makes it easy for security teams to instantly patch known Java and .NET flaws with no downtime, protect their applications from known and Zero Day attacks, and virtually upgrade out-of-support Java applications – all without time consuming and expensive source code changes or unacceptable performance overhead.
Waratek is one of CSO Online’s Best Security Software solutions of 2017, a winner of the RSA Innovation Sandbox Award, and more than a dozen other awards and recognitions.
Waratek is based in Dublin, Ireland and Atlanta, Georgia.
John Matthew Holt, Waratek’s Founder and Chief Technology Officer and Apostolos Giannakidis, Waratek’s Lead Security Architect contributed to this Alert.