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7b347409fa
In 9.6, we moved a number of functions over to using the GRANT system to control access instead of having hard-coded superuser checks. As it turns out, adminpack was creating another function in the catalog for one of those backend functions where the superuser check was removed, specifically pg_rotate_logfile(), but it didn't get the memo about having to REVOKE EXECUTE on the alternative-name function (pg_logfile_rotate()), meaning that in any installations with adminpack on 9.6 and higher, any user is able to run the pg_logfile_rotate() function, which then calls pg_rotate_logfile() and rotates the logfile. Fix by adding a new version of adminpack (1.1) which handles the REVOKE. As this function should have only been available to the superuser, this is a security issue, albeit a minor one. In HEAD, move the changes implemented for adminpack up to be adminpack 2.0 instead of 1.1. Security: CVE-2018-1115
7 lines
274 B
SQL
7 lines
274 B
SQL
/* contrib/adminpack/adminpack--1.0--1.1.sql */
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-- complain if script is sourced in psql, rather than via ALTER EXTENSION
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\echo Use "ALTER EXTENSION adminpack UPDATE TO '1.1'" to load this file. \quit
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REVOKE EXECUTE ON FUNCTION pg_catalog.pg_logfile_rotate() FROM PUBLIC;
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