Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
Hi Cary, Thank you for responding! I've had some direct contacts, so hopefully will get it resolved. thanks for everyone's willingness to help! best, Heidi Heidi Frank Electronic Resources Special Formats Cataloger New York University Libraries Knowledge Access Resources Management Services 20 Cooper Square, 3rd Floor New York, NY 10003 212-998-2499 (office) 212-995-4366 (fax) h...@nyu.edu Skype: hfrank71 On Wed, Nov 12, 2014 at 12:26 AM, Cary Gordon listu...@chillco.com wrote: If the site was not patched within a few hours of the announcement, the odds are that you will need to rebuild it from a backup made before October 15th. It is very difficult to detect a successful exploit, or predict if a back-door will be used. I suggest that your first move should be to contact Bluehost, as they may have done the patch for you. If not, please read the rest of this thread. If you have more questions or need help, let us know here. I will attempt to address any issue that is explored in this forum. Cary On Nov 11, 2014, at 8:40 PM, Heidi P Frank h...@nyu.edu wrote: Hi, A colleague and I volunteer for an organization to maintain their website, which is a Drupal site hosted on Bluehost, however, neither of us are very experienced with Drupal. So we've been trying to figure out what we need to do to prevent the site from being affected by this vulnerability issue, and have read a lot of the documentation and tried following the instructions to upgrade, etc. but are still having trouble. If there is anyone on this list who would be willing to speak with us and answer some questions about how we need to proceed, please contact me off list. Any guidance will be much appreciated with numerous Thank You's! (i.e., we need some pro bono assistance :) cheers, Heidi Heidi Frank Electronic Resources Special Formats Cataloger New York University Libraries Knowledge Access Resources Management Services 20 Cooper Square, 3rd Floor New York, NY 10003 212-998-2499 (office) 212-995-4366 (fax) h...@nyu.edu Skype: hfrank71 On Sun, Nov 2, 2014 at 1:29 PM, Cary Gordon listu...@chillco.com wrote: If you can migrate to a maintained service, you could use feeds or migrate to move your content. You could also take that approach on your own new site. Obviously, none of your entities — nodes, menus, users, blocks, taxonomies, etc. — should contain executable code. I suggest that you do not migrate users or menus, unless you have the ability to validate your data. I love the internets, but I have learned that nobody should be running public facing services — open-source or other — unless they are prepared to maintain them, including managing a disaster recovery plan and vigilantly monitoring and acting on security notices. If this is not doable, use a service provider to manage it. The days of running services from a computer under a desk are gone. Cary On Sunday, November 2, 2014, Hickner, Andrew andrew.hick...@yale.edu wrote: I'd be curious to hear how others are proceeding. We had already planned to migrate our D7 sites to a centralized Drupal instance offered here at Yale and this has just accelerated the timetable. I imagine there are a lot of libraries running Drupal though who don't have this kind of option and might not have pre-October 15 backups to revert to (we don't!) Andy Hickner Web Services Librarian Yale University Cushing/Whitney Medical Library http://library.medicine.yale.edu/ From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] on behalf of Lin, Kun [l...@cua.edu javascript:;] Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 2:10 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability I think so. However, Cloudflare in their blog post claim they have develop a way to block the attack immediately when the vulnerability was announced. Whether or not they know the exploit ahead of time or not, it would be good to know someone is watching out for you for $20 a month. And you will be mad if you took Oct 15th off without it. I just check, I patched my instance on Oct 16th. Not sure what's going to happened. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 1:44 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability The vulnerability was discovered in the course of an audit by SektionEins, a German security firm, and immediately reported to the Drupal Security Team. Because this was a pretty obscure vulnerability with no reported exploits, the team decided to wait until the first scheduled release date after DrupalCon Amsterdam to put out the notice and patch. Obviously
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
I have a bluehost site with Wordpress on it. In my case whenever a vulnerability has been discovered they have been very good about automatically updating it. Keep in mind this is a standard instal using cpanel. Your mileage may vary if you did something custom. Edward Iglesias On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 11:40 PM, Heidi P Frank h...@nyu.edu wrote: Hi, A colleague and I volunteer for an organization to maintain their website, which is a Drupal site hosted on Bluehost, however, neither of us are very experienced with Drupal. So we've been trying to figure out what we need to do to prevent the site from being affected by this vulnerability issue, and have read a lot of the documentation and tried following the instructions to upgrade, etc. but are still having trouble. If there is anyone on this list who would be willing to speak with us and answer some questions about how we need to proceed, please contact me off list. Any guidance will be much appreciated with numerous Thank You's! (i.e., we need some pro bono assistance :) cheers, Heidi Heidi Frank Electronic Resources Special Formats Cataloger New York University Libraries Knowledge Access Resources Management Services 20 Cooper Square, 3rd Floor New York, NY 10003 212-998-2499 (office) 212-995-4366 (fax) h...@nyu.edu Skype: hfrank71 On Sun, Nov 2, 2014 at 1:29 PM, Cary Gordon listu...@chillco.com wrote: If you can migrate to a maintained service, you could use feeds or migrate to move your content. You could also take that approach on your own new site. Obviously, none of your entities — nodes, menus, users, blocks, taxonomies, etc. — should contain executable code. I suggest that you do not migrate users or menus, unless you have the ability to validate your data. I love the internets, but I have learned that nobody should be running public facing services — open-source or other — unless they are prepared to maintain them, including managing a disaster recovery plan and vigilantly monitoring and acting on security notices. If this is not doable, use a service provider to manage it. The days of running services from a computer under a desk are gone. Cary On Sunday, November 2, 2014, Hickner, Andrew andrew.hick...@yale.edu wrote: I'd be curious to hear how others are proceeding. We had already planned to migrate our D7 sites to a centralized Drupal instance offered here at Yale and this has just accelerated the timetable. I imagine there are a lot of libraries running Drupal though who don't have this kind of option and might not have pre-October 15 backups to revert to (we don't!) Andy Hickner Web Services Librarian Yale University Cushing/Whitney Medical Library http://library.medicine.yale.edu/ From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] on behalf of Lin, Kun [l...@cua.edu javascript:;] Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 2:10 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability I think so. However, Cloudflare in their blog post claim they have develop a way to block the attack immediately when the vulnerability was announced. Whether or not they know the exploit ahead of time or not, it would be good to know someone is watching out for you for $20 a month. And you will be mad if you took Oct 15th off without it. I just check, I patched my instance on Oct 16th. Not sure what's going to happened. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 1:44 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability The vulnerability was discovered in the course of an audit by SektionEins, a German security firm, and immediately reported to the Drupal Security Team. Because this was a pretty obscure vulnerability with no reported exploits, the team decided to wait until the first scheduled release date after DrupalCon Amsterdam to put out the notice and patch. Obviously, they knew that once word of the vulnerability was announced, there would immediately be a wave of exploits, so they imposed a blackout on any mention of it before October 15th. I think that they stuck to their word. Of course, attacks started a few hours after the announcement. Cary On Oct 31, 2014, at 9:38 AM, Joe Hourcle onei...@grace.nascom.nasa.gov javascript:; wrote: On Oct 31, 2014, at 11:46 AM, Lin, Kun wrote: Hi Cary, I don't know from whom. But for the heartbeat vulnerability earlier this year, they as well as some other big providers like Google and Amazon were notified and patched before it was announced. If they have an employee who
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
Hi, A colleague and I volunteer for an organization to maintain their website, which is a Drupal site hosted on Bluehost, however, neither of us are very experienced with Drupal. So we've been trying to figure out what we need to do to prevent the site from being affected by this vulnerability issue, and have read a lot of the documentation and tried following the instructions to upgrade, etc. but are still having trouble. If there is anyone on this list who would be willing to speak with us and answer some questions about how we need to proceed, please contact me off list. Any guidance will be much appreciated with numerous Thank You's! (i.e., we need some pro bono assistance :) cheers, Heidi Heidi Frank Electronic Resources Special Formats Cataloger New York University Libraries Knowledge Access Resources Management Services 20 Cooper Square, 3rd Floor New York, NY 10003 212-998-2499 (office) 212-995-4366 (fax) h...@nyu.edu Skype: hfrank71 On Sun, Nov 2, 2014 at 1:29 PM, Cary Gordon listu...@chillco.com wrote: If you can migrate to a maintained service, you could use feeds or migrate to move your content. You could also take that approach on your own new site. Obviously, none of your entities — nodes, menus, users, blocks, taxonomies, etc. — should contain executable code. I suggest that you do not migrate users or menus, unless you have the ability to validate your data. I love the internets, but I have learned that nobody should be running public facing services — open-source or other — unless they are prepared to maintain them, including managing a disaster recovery plan and vigilantly monitoring and acting on security notices. If this is not doable, use a service provider to manage it. The days of running services from a computer under a desk are gone. Cary On Sunday, November 2, 2014, Hickner, Andrew andrew.hick...@yale.edu wrote: I'd be curious to hear how others are proceeding. We had already planned to migrate our D7 sites to a centralized Drupal instance offered here at Yale and this has just accelerated the timetable. I imagine there are a lot of libraries running Drupal though who don't have this kind of option and might not have pre-October 15 backups to revert to (we don't!) Andy Hickner Web Services Librarian Yale University Cushing/Whitney Medical Library http://library.medicine.yale.edu/ From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] on behalf of Lin, Kun [l...@cua.edu javascript:;] Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 2:10 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability I think so. However, Cloudflare in their blog post claim they have develop a way to block the attack immediately when the vulnerability was announced. Whether or not they know the exploit ahead of time or not, it would be good to know someone is watching out for you for $20 a month. And you will be mad if you took Oct 15th off without it. I just check, I patched my instance on Oct 16th. Not sure what's going to happened. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 1:44 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability The vulnerability was discovered in the course of an audit by SektionEins, a German security firm, and immediately reported to the Drupal Security Team. Because this was a pretty obscure vulnerability with no reported exploits, the team decided to wait until the first scheduled release date after DrupalCon Amsterdam to put out the notice and patch. Obviously, they knew that once word of the vulnerability was announced, there would immediately be a wave of exploits, so they imposed a blackout on any mention of it before October 15th. I think that they stuck to their word. Of course, attacks started a few hours after the announcement. Cary On Oct 31, 2014, at 9:38 AM, Joe Hourcle onei...@grace.nascom.nasa.gov javascript:; wrote: On Oct 31, 2014, at 11:46 AM, Lin, Kun wrote: Hi Cary, I don't know from whom. But for the heartbeat vulnerability earlier this year, they as well as some other big providers like Google and Amazon were notified and patched before it was announced. If they have an employee who contributes to the project, it's possible that this was discussed on development lists before it was sent down to user level mailing lists. Odds are, there's also some network of people who are willing to give things a cursory review / beta test in a more controlled manner before they're officially released (and might break thousands of websites). It would make sense that companies who derive a good deal of their profits in supporting software would
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
If the site was not patched within a few hours of the announcement, the odds are that you will need to rebuild it from a backup made before October 15th. It is very difficult to detect a successful exploit, or predict if a back-door will be used. I suggest that your first move should be to contact Bluehost, as they may have done the patch for you. If not, please read the rest of this thread. If you have more questions or need help, let us know here. I will attempt to address any issue that is explored in this forum. Cary On Nov 11, 2014, at 8:40 PM, Heidi P Frank h...@nyu.edu wrote: Hi, A colleague and I volunteer for an organization to maintain their website, which is a Drupal site hosted on Bluehost, however, neither of us are very experienced with Drupal. So we've been trying to figure out what we need to do to prevent the site from being affected by this vulnerability issue, and have read a lot of the documentation and tried following the instructions to upgrade, etc. but are still having trouble. If there is anyone on this list who would be willing to speak with us and answer some questions about how we need to proceed, please contact me off list. Any guidance will be much appreciated with numerous Thank You's! (i.e., we need some pro bono assistance :) cheers, Heidi Heidi Frank Electronic Resources Special Formats Cataloger New York University Libraries Knowledge Access Resources Management Services 20 Cooper Square, 3rd Floor New York, NY 10003 212-998-2499 (office) 212-995-4366 (fax) h...@nyu.edu Skype: hfrank71 On Sun, Nov 2, 2014 at 1:29 PM, Cary Gordon listu...@chillco.com wrote: If you can migrate to a maintained service, you could use feeds or migrate to move your content. You could also take that approach on your own new site. Obviously, none of your entities — nodes, menus, users, blocks, taxonomies, etc. — should contain executable code. I suggest that you do not migrate users or menus, unless you have the ability to validate your data. I love the internets, but I have learned that nobody should be running public facing services — open-source or other — unless they are prepared to maintain them, including managing a disaster recovery plan and vigilantly monitoring and acting on security notices. If this is not doable, use a service provider to manage it. The days of running services from a computer under a desk are gone. Cary On Sunday, November 2, 2014, Hickner, Andrew andrew.hick...@yale.edu wrote: I'd be curious to hear how others are proceeding. We had already planned to migrate our D7 sites to a centralized Drupal instance offered here at Yale and this has just accelerated the timetable. I imagine there are a lot of libraries running Drupal though who don't have this kind of option and might not have pre-October 15 backups to revert to (we don't!) Andy Hickner Web Services Librarian Yale University Cushing/Whitney Medical Library http://library.medicine.yale.edu/ From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] on behalf of Lin, Kun [l...@cua.edu javascript:;] Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 2:10 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability I think so. However, Cloudflare in their blog post claim they have develop a way to block the attack immediately when the vulnerability was announced. Whether or not they know the exploit ahead of time or not, it would be good to know someone is watching out for you for $20 a month. And you will be mad if you took Oct 15th off without it. I just check, I patched my instance on Oct 16th. Not sure what's going to happened. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 1:44 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability The vulnerability was discovered in the course of an audit by SektionEins, a German security firm, and immediately reported to the Drupal Security Team. Because this was a pretty obscure vulnerability with no reported exploits, the team decided to wait until the first scheduled release date after DrupalCon Amsterdam to put out the notice and patch. Obviously, they knew that once word of the vulnerability was announced, there would immediately be a wave of exploits, so they imposed a blackout on any mention of it before October 15th. I think that they stuck to their word. Of course, attacks started a few hours after the announcement. Cary On Oct 31, 2014, at 9:38 AM, Joe Hourcle onei...@grace.nascom.nasa.gov javascript:; wrote: On Oct 31, 2014, at 11:46 AM, Lin, Kun wrote: Hi Cary, I don't know from whom. But for the heartbeat vulnerability earlier this year, they as well as some other big providers like
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
If you can migrate to a maintained service, you could use feeds or migrate to move your content. You could also take that approach on your own new site. Obviously, none of your entities — nodes, menus, users, blocks, taxonomies, etc. — should contain executable code. I suggest that you do not migrate users or menus, unless you have the ability to validate your data. I love the internets, but I have learned that nobody should be running public facing services — open-source or other — unless they are prepared to maintain them, including managing a disaster recovery plan and vigilantly monitoring and acting on security notices. If this is not doable, use a service provider to manage it. The days of running services from a computer under a desk are gone. Cary On Sunday, November 2, 2014, Hickner, Andrew andrew.hick...@yale.edu wrote: I'd be curious to hear how others are proceeding. We had already planned to migrate our D7 sites to a centralized Drupal instance offered here at Yale and this has just accelerated the timetable. I imagine there are a lot of libraries running Drupal though who don't have this kind of option and might not have pre-October 15 backups to revert to (we don't!) Andy Hickner Web Services Librarian Yale University Cushing/Whitney Medical Library http://library.medicine.yale.edu/ From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] on behalf of Lin, Kun [l...@cua.edu javascript:;] Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 2:10 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability I think so. However, Cloudflare in their blog post claim they have develop a way to block the attack immediately when the vulnerability was announced. Whether or not they know the exploit ahead of time or not, it would be good to know someone is watching out for you for $20 a month. And you will be mad if you took Oct 15th off without it. I just check, I patched my instance on Oct 16th. Not sure what's going to happened. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 1:44 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability The vulnerability was discovered in the course of an audit by SektionEins, a German security firm, and immediately reported to the Drupal Security Team. Because this was a pretty obscure vulnerability with no reported exploits, the team decided to wait until the first scheduled release date after DrupalCon Amsterdam to put out the notice and patch. Obviously, they knew that once word of the vulnerability was announced, there would immediately be a wave of exploits, so they imposed a blackout on any mention of it before October 15th. I think that they stuck to their word. Of course, attacks started a few hours after the announcement. Cary On Oct 31, 2014, at 9:38 AM, Joe Hourcle onei...@grace.nascom.nasa.gov javascript:; wrote: On Oct 31, 2014, at 11:46 AM, Lin, Kun wrote: Hi Cary, I don't know from whom. But for the heartbeat vulnerability earlier this year, they as well as some other big providers like Google and Amazon were notified and patched before it was announced. If they have an employee who contributes to the project, it's possible that this was discussed on development lists before it was sent down to user level mailing lists. Odds are, there's also some network of people who are willing to give things a cursory review / beta test in a more controlled manner before they're officially released (and might break thousands of websites). It would make sense that companies who derive a good deal of their profits in supporting software would participate in those programs, as well. I could see categorizing either of those as 'ahead of the *general* public', which was Kun's assertion. -Joe -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 11:10 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability How do they receive vulnerability report ahead of general public? From whom? Cary On Friday, October 31, 2014, Lin, Kun l...@cua.edu javascript:; wrote: If you are using drupal as main website, consider using Cloudflare Pro. It's just $20 a month and worth it. They'll help block most attacks. And they usually receive vulnerability report ahead of general public. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 9:59 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
This is what I posted to the Drupal4Lib list: By now, you should have seen https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and heard about the Drupageddon exploits. and you may be wondering if you were vulnerable or iff you were hit by this, how you can tell and what you should do. Drupageddon affects Drupal 7, Drupal 8 and, if you use the DBTNG module, Drupal 6. The general recommendation is that if you do not know or are unsure of your server's security and you did not either update to Drupal 7.32 or apply the patch within a few hours of the notice, you should assume that your site (and server) was hacked and you should restore everything to a backup from before October 15th or earlier. If your manage your server and you have any doubts about your file security, you should restore that to a pre 10/15 image, as well or do a reinstall of your server software. I know this sounds drastic, and I know that not everyone will do that. There are some tests you can run on your server, but they can only verify the hacks that have been identified. At MPOW, we enforce file security on our production servers. Our deployments are scripted in our continuous integration system, and only that system can write files outside of the temporal file directory (e.g. /sites/site-name/files). We also forbid executables in the temporal file system. This prevents many exploits related to this issue. Of course, the attack itself is on the database, so even if the file system is not compromised, the attacker could, for example, get admin access to the site by creating an account, making it an admin, and sending themselves a password. While they need a valid email address to set the password, they would likely change that as soon as they were in. Some resources: https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 https://www.acquia.com/blog/learning-hackers-week-after-drupal-sql-injection-announcement http://drupal.stackexchange.com/questions/133996/drupal-sa-core-2014-005-how-to-tell-if-my-server-sites-were-compromised I won't attempt to outline every audit technique here, but if you have any questions, please ask them. The takeaway from this incident, is that while Drupal has a great security team and community, it is incumbent upon site owners and admins to pay attention. Most Drupal security issues are only exploitable by privileged users, and admins need to be careful and read every security notice. If a vulnerability is publicly exploitable, you must take action immediately. Thanks, Cary On Thu, Oct 30, 2014 at 5:24 PM, Dan Scott deni...@gmail.com wrote: Via lwn.net, I came across https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and my heart sank: Automated attacks began compromising Drupal 7 websites that were not patched or updated to Drupal 7.32 within hours of the announcement of SA-CORE-2014-005 - https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005Drupal https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005 core - SQL injection https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005. You should proceed under the assumption that every Drupal 7 website was compromised unless updated or patched before Oct 15th, 11pm UTC, that is 7 hours after the announcement. That's about as bad as it gets, folks. -- Cary Gordon The Cherry Hill Company http://chillco.com
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
If you are using drupal as main website, consider using Cloudflare Pro. It's just $20 a month and worth it. They'll help block most attacks. And they usually receive vulnerability report ahead of general public. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 9:59 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability This is what I posted to the Drupal4Lib list: By now, you should have seen https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and heard about the Drupageddon exploits. and you may be wondering if you were vulnerable or iff you were hit by this, how you can tell and what you should do. Drupageddon affects Drupal 7, Drupal 8 and, if you use the DBTNG module, Drupal 6. The general recommendation is that if you do not know or are unsure of your server's security and you did not either update to Drupal 7.32 or apply the patch within a few hours of the notice, you should assume that your site (and server) was hacked and you should restore everything to a backup from before October 15th or earlier. If your manage your server and you have any doubts about your file security, you should restore that to a pre 10/15 image, as well or do a reinstall of your server software. I know this sounds drastic, and I know that not everyone will do that. There are some tests you can run on your server, but they can only verify the hacks that have been identified. At MPOW, we enforce file security on our production servers. Our deployments are scripted in our continuous integration system, and only that system can write files outside of the temporal file directory (e.g. /sites/site-name/files). We also forbid executables in the temporal file system. This prevents many exploits related to this issue. Of course, the attack itself is on the database, so even if the file system is not compromised, the attacker could, for example, get admin access to the site by creating an account, making it an admin, and sending themselves a password. While they need a valid email address to set the password, they would likely change that as soon as they were in. Some resources: https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 https://www.acquia.com/blog/learning-hackers-week-after-drupal-sql-injection-announcement http://drupal.stackexchange.com/questions/133996/drupal-sa-core-2014-005-how-to-tell-if-my-server-sites-were-compromised I won't attempt to outline every audit technique here, but if you have any questions, please ask them. The takeaway from this incident, is that while Drupal has a great security team and community, it is incumbent upon site owners and admins to pay attention. Most Drupal security issues are only exploitable by privileged users, and admins need to be careful and read every security notice. If a vulnerability is publicly exploitable, you must take action immediately. Thanks, Cary On Thu, Oct 30, 2014 at 5:24 PM, Dan Scott deni...@gmail.com wrote: Via lwn.net, I came across https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and my heart sank: Automated attacks began compromising Drupal 7 websites that were not patched or updated to Drupal 7.32 within hours of the announcement of SA-CORE-2014-005 - https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005Drupal https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005 core - SQL injection https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005. You should proceed under the assumption that every Drupal 7 website was compromised unless updated or patched before Oct 15th, 11pm UTC, that is 7 hours after the announcement. That's about as bad as it gets, folks. -- Cary Gordon The Cherry Hill Company http://chillco.com
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
How do they receive vulnerability report ahead of general public? From whom? Cary On Friday, October 31, 2014, Lin, Kun l...@cua.edu wrote: If you are using drupal as main website, consider using Cloudflare Pro. It's just $20 a month and worth it. They'll help block most attacks. And they usually receive vulnerability report ahead of general public. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 9:59 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability This is what I posted to the Drupal4Lib list: By now, you should have seen https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and heard about the Drupageddon exploits. and you may be wondering if you were vulnerable or iff you were hit by this, how you can tell and what you should do. Drupageddon affects Drupal 7, Drupal 8 and, if you use the DBTNG module, Drupal 6. The general recommendation is that if you do not know or are unsure of your server's security and you did not either update to Drupal 7.32 or apply the patch within a few hours of the notice, you should assume that your site (and server) was hacked and you should restore everything to a backup from before October 15th or earlier. If your manage your server and you have any doubts about your file security, you should restore that to a pre 10/15 image, as well or do a reinstall of your server software. I know this sounds drastic, and I know that not everyone will do that. There are some tests you can run on your server, but they can only verify the hacks that have been identified. At MPOW, we enforce file security on our production servers. Our deployments are scripted in our continuous integration system, and only that system can write files outside of the temporal file directory (e.g. /sites/site-name/files). We also forbid executables in the temporal file system. This prevents many exploits related to this issue. Of course, the attack itself is on the database, so even if the file system is not compromised, the attacker could, for example, get admin access to the site by creating an account, making it an admin, and sending themselves a password. While they need a valid email address to set the password, they would likely change that as soon as they were in. Some resources: https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 https://www.acquia.com/blog/learning-hackers-week-after-drupal-sql-injection-announcement http://drupal.stackexchange.com/questions/133996/drupal-sa-core-2014-005-how-to-tell-if-my-server-sites-were-compromised I won't attempt to outline every audit technique here, but if you have any questions, please ask them. The takeaway from this incident, is that while Drupal has a great security team and community, it is incumbent upon site owners and admins to pay attention. Most Drupal security issues are only exploitable by privileged users, and admins need to be careful and read every security notice. If a vulnerability is publicly exploitable, you must take action immediately. Thanks, Cary On Thu, Oct 30, 2014 at 5:24 PM, Dan Scott deni...@gmail.com javascript:; wrote: Via lwn.net, I came across https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and my heart sank: Automated attacks began compromising Drupal 7 websites that were not patched or updated to Drupal 7.32 within hours of the announcement of SA-CORE-2014-005 - https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005Drupal https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005 core - SQL injection https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005. You should proceed under the assumption that every Drupal 7 website was compromised unless updated or patched before Oct 15th, 11pm UTC, that is 7 hours after the announcement. That's about as bad as it gets, folks. -- Cary Gordon The Cherry Hill Company http://chillco.com -- Cary Gordon The Cherry Hill Company http://chillco.com
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
Hi Cary, I don't know from whom. But for the heartbeat vulnerability earlier this year, they as well as some other big providers like Google and Amazon were notified and patched before it was announced. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 11:10 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability How do they receive vulnerability report ahead of general public? From whom? Cary On Friday, October 31, 2014, Lin, Kun l...@cua.edu wrote: If you are using drupal as main website, consider using Cloudflare Pro. It's just $20 a month and worth it. They'll help block most attacks. And they usually receive vulnerability report ahead of general public. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 9:59 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability This is what I posted to the Drupal4Lib list: By now, you should have seen https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and heard about the Drupageddon exploits. and you may be wondering if you were vulnerable or iff you were hit by this, how you can tell and what you should do. Drupageddon affects Drupal 7, Drupal 8 and, if you use the DBTNG module, Drupal 6. The general recommendation is that if you do not know or are unsure of your server's security and you did not either update to Drupal 7.32 or apply the patch within a few hours of the notice, you should assume that your site (and server) was hacked and you should restore everything to a backup from before October 15th or earlier. If your manage your server and you have any doubts about your file security, you should restore that to a pre 10/15 image, as well or do a reinstall of your server software. I know this sounds drastic, and I know that not everyone will do that. There are some tests you can run on your server, but they can only verify the hacks that have been identified. At MPOW, we enforce file security on our production servers. Our deployments are scripted in our continuous integration system, and only that system can write files outside of the temporal file directory (e.g. /sites/site-name/files). We also forbid executables in the temporal file system. This prevents many exploits related to this issue. Of course, the attack itself is on the database, so even if the file system is not compromised, the attacker could, for example, get admin access to the site by creating an account, making it an admin, and sending themselves a password. While they need a valid email address to set the password, they would likely change that as soon as they were in. Some resources: https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 https://www.acquia.com/blog/learning-hackers-week-after-drupal-sql-inj ection-announcement http://drupal.stackexchange.com/questions/133996/drupal-sa-core-2014-0 05-how-to-tell-if-my-server-sites-were-compromised I won't attempt to outline every audit technique here, but if you have any questions, please ask them. The takeaway from this incident, is that while Drupal has a great security team and community, it is incumbent upon site owners and admins to pay attention. Most Drupal security issues are only exploitable by privileged users, and admins need to be careful and read every security notice. If a vulnerability is publicly exploitable, you must take action immediately. Thanks, Cary On Thu, Oct 30, 2014 at 5:24 PM, Dan Scott deni...@gmail.com javascript:; wrote: Via lwn.net, I came across https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and my heart sank: Automated attacks began compromising Drupal 7 websites that were not patched or updated to Drupal 7.32 within hours of the announcement of SA-CORE-2014-005 - https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005Drupal https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005 core - SQL injection https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005. You should proceed under the assumption that every Drupal 7 website was compromised unless updated or patched before Oct 15th, 11pm UTC, that is 7 hours after the announcement. That's about as bad as it gets, folks. -- Cary Gordon The Cherry Hill Company http://chillco.com -- Cary Gordon The Cherry Hill Company http://chillco.com
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
On Oct 31, 2014, at 11:46 AM, Lin, Kun wrote: Hi Cary, I don't know from whom. But for the heartbeat vulnerability earlier this year, they as well as some other big providers like Google and Amazon were notified and patched before it was announced. If they have an employee who contributes to the project, it's possible that this was discussed on development lists before it was sent down to user level mailing lists. Odds are, there's also some network of people who are willing to give things a cursory review / beta test in a more controlled manner before they're officially released (and might break thousands of websites). It would make sense that companies who derive a good deal of their profits in supporting software would participate in those programs, as well. I could see categorizing either of those as 'ahead of the *general* public', which was Kun's assertion. -Joe -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 11:10 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability How do they receive vulnerability report ahead of general public? From whom? Cary On Friday, October 31, 2014, Lin, Kun l...@cua.edu wrote: If you are using drupal as main website, consider using Cloudflare Pro. It's just $20 a month and worth it. They'll help block most attacks. And they usually receive vulnerability report ahead of general public. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 9:59 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability This is what I posted to the Drupal4Lib list: By now, you should have seen https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and heard about the Drupageddon exploits. and you may be wondering if you were vulnerable or iff you were hit by this, how you can tell and what you should do. Drupageddon affects Drupal 7, Drupal 8 and, if you use the DBTNG module, Drupal 6. The general recommendation is that if you do not know or are unsure of your server's security and you did not either update to Drupal 7.32 or apply the patch within a few hours of the notice, you should assume that your site (and server) was hacked and you should restore everything to a backup from before October 15th or earlier. If your manage your server and you have any doubts about your file security, you should restore that to a pre 10/15 image, as well or do a reinstall of your server software. I know this sounds drastic, and I know that not everyone will do that. There are some tests you can run on your server, but they can only verify the hacks that have been identified. At MPOW, we enforce file security on our production servers. Our deployments are scripted in our continuous integration system, and only that system can write files outside of the temporal file directory (e.g. /sites/site-name/files). We also forbid executables in the temporal file system. This prevents many exploits related to this issue. Of course, the attack itself is on the database, so even if the file system is not compromised, the attacker could, for example, get admin access to the site by creating an account, making it an admin, and sending themselves a password. While they need a valid email address to set the password, they would likely change that as soon as they were in. Some resources: https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 https://www.acquia.com/blog/learning-hackers-week-after-drupal-sql-inj ection-announcement http://drupal.stackexchange.com/questions/133996/drupal-sa-core-2014-0 05-how-to-tell-if-my-server-sites-were-compromised I won't attempt to outline every audit technique here, but if you have any questions, please ask them. The takeaway from this incident, is that while Drupal has a great security team and community, it is incumbent upon site owners and admins to pay attention. Most Drupal security issues are only exploitable by privileged users, and admins need to be careful and read every security notice. If a vulnerability is publicly exploitable, you must take action immediately. Thanks, Cary On Thu, Oct 30, 2014 at 5:24 PM, Dan Scott deni...@gmail.com javascript:; wrote: Via lwn.net, I came across https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and my heart sank: Automated attacks began compromising Drupal 7 websites that were not patched or updated to Drupal 7.32 within hours of the announcement of SA-CORE-2014-005 - https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005Drupal https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005 core - SQL injection https://www.drupal.org/SA-CORE-2014-005. You should proceed under the assumption that every Drupal 7 website was compromised unless updated or patched
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
http://blog.ircmaxell.com/2014/10/a-lesson-in-security.html is an interesting and thoughtful write-up on the technical details of this vulnerability. On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 12:38 PM, Joe Hourcle onei...@grace.nascom.nasa.gov wrote: On Oct 31, 2014, at 11:46 AM, Lin, Kun wrote: Hi Cary, I don't know from whom. But for the heartbeat vulnerability earlier this year, they as well as some other big providers like Google and Amazon were notified and patched before it was announced. If they have an employee who contributes to the project, it's possible that this was discussed on development lists before it was sent down to user level mailing lists. Odds are, there's also some network of people who are willing to give things a cursory review / beta test in a more controlled manner before they're officially released (and might break thousands of websites). It would make sense that companies who derive a good deal of their profits in supporting software would participate in those programs, as well. I could see categorizing either of those as 'ahead of the *general* public', which was Kun's assertion. -Joe -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 11:10 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability How do they receive vulnerability report ahead of general public? From whom? Cary On Friday, October 31, 2014, Lin, Kun l...@cua.edu wrote: If you are using drupal as main website, consider using Cloudflare Pro. It's just $20 a month and worth it. They'll help block most attacks. And they usually receive vulnerability report ahead of general public. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 9:59 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability This is what I posted to the Drupal4Lib list: By now, you should have seen https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and heard about the Drupageddon exploits. and you may be wondering if you were vulnerable or iff you were hit by this, how you can tell and what you should do. Drupageddon affects Drupal 7, Drupal 8 and, if you use the DBTNG module, Drupal 6. The general recommendation is that if you do not know or are unsure of your server's security and you did not either update to Drupal 7.32 or apply the patch within a few hours of the notice, you should assume that your site (and server) was hacked and you should restore everything to a backup from before October 15th or earlier. If your manage your server and you have any doubts about your file security, you should restore that to a pre 10/15 image, as well or do a reinstall of your server software. I know this sounds drastic, and I know that not everyone will do that. There are some tests you can run on your server, but they can only verify the hacks that have been identified. At MPOW, we enforce file security on our production servers. Our deployments are scripted in our continuous integration system, and only that system can write files outside of the temporal file directory (e.g. /sites/site-name/files). We also forbid executables in the temporal file system. This prevents many exploits related to this issue. Of course, the attack itself is on the database, so even if the file system is not compromised, the attacker could, for example, get admin access to the site by creating an account, making it an admin, and sending themselves a password. While they need a valid email address to set the password, they would likely change that as soon as they were in. Some resources: https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 https://www.acquia.com/blog/learning-hackers-week-after-drupal-sql-inj ection-announcement http://drupal.stackexchange.com/questions/133996/drupal-sa-core-2014-0 05-how-to-tell-if-my-server-sites-were-compromised I won't attempt to outline every audit technique here, but if you have any questions, please ask them. The takeaway from this incident, is that while Drupal has a great security team and community, it is incumbent upon site owners and admins to pay attention. Most Drupal security issues are only exploitable by privileged users, and admins need to be careful and read every security notice. If a vulnerability is publicly exploitable, you must take action immediately. Thanks, Cary On Thu, Oct 30, 2014 at 5:24 PM, Dan Scott deni...@gmail.com javascript:; wrote: Via lwn.net, I came across https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and my heart sank: Automated attacks began compromising Drupal 7 websites that were not patched or updated to Drupal 7.32 within hours of the announcement
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
The vulnerability was discovered in the course of an audit by SektionEins, a German security firm, and immediately reported to the Drupal Security Team. Because this was a pretty obscure vulnerability with no reported exploits, the team decided to wait until the first scheduled release date after DrupalCon Amsterdam to put out the notice and patch. Obviously, they knew that once word of the vulnerability was announced, there would immediately be a wave of exploits, so they imposed a blackout on any mention of it before October 15th. I think that they stuck to their word. Of course, attacks started a few hours after the announcement. Cary On Oct 31, 2014, at 9:38 AM, Joe Hourcle onei...@grace.nascom.nasa.gov wrote: On Oct 31, 2014, at 11:46 AM, Lin, Kun wrote: Hi Cary, I don't know from whom. But for the heartbeat vulnerability earlier this year, they as well as some other big providers like Google and Amazon were notified and patched before it was announced. If they have an employee who contributes to the project, it's possible that this was discussed on development lists before it was sent down to user level mailing lists. Odds are, there's also some network of people who are willing to give things a cursory review / beta test in a more controlled manner before they're officially released (and might break thousands of websites). It would make sense that companies who derive a good deal of their profits in supporting software would participate in those programs, as well. I could see categorizing either of those as 'ahead of the *general* public', which was Kun's assertion. -Joe -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 11:10 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability How do they receive vulnerability report ahead of general public? From whom? Cary On Friday, October 31, 2014, Lin, Kun l...@cua.edu wrote: If you are using drupal as main website, consider using Cloudflare Pro. It's just $20 a month and worth it. They'll help block most attacks. And they usually receive vulnerability report ahead of general public. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 9:59 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability This is what I posted to the Drupal4Lib list: By now, you should have seen https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and heard about the Drupageddon exploits. and you may be wondering if you were vulnerable or iff you were hit by this, how you can tell and what you should do. Drupageddon affects Drupal 7, Drupal 8 and, if you use the DBTNG module, Drupal 6. The general recommendation is that if you do not know or are unsure of your server's security and you did not either update to Drupal 7.32 or apply the patch within a few hours of the notice, you should assume that your site (and server) was hacked and you should restore everything to a backup from before October 15th or earlier. If your manage your server and you have any doubts about your file security, you should restore that to a pre 10/15 image, as well or do a reinstall of your server software. I know this sounds drastic, and I know that not everyone will do that. There are some tests you can run on your server, but they can only verify the hacks that have been identified. At MPOW, we enforce file security on our production servers. Our deployments are scripted in our continuous integration system, and only that system can write files outside of the temporal file directory (e.g. /sites/site-name/files). We also forbid executables in the temporal file system. This prevents many exploits related to this issue. Of course, the attack itself is on the database, so even if the file system is not compromised, the attacker could, for example, get admin access to the site by creating an account, making it an admin, and sending themselves a password. While they need a valid email address to set the password, they would likely change that as soon as they were in. Some resources: https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 https://www.acquia.com/blog/learning-hackers-week-after-drupal-sql-inj ection-announcement http://drupal.stackexchange.com/questions/133996/drupal-sa-core-2014-0 05-how-to-tell-if-my-server-sites-were-compromised I won't attempt to outline every audit technique here, but if you have any questions, please ask them. The takeaway from this incident, is that while Drupal has a great security team and community, it is incumbent upon site owners and admins to pay attention. Most Drupal security issues are only exploitable by privileged users
Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability
I think so. However, Cloudflare in their blog post claim they have develop a way to block the attack immediately when the vulnerability was announced. Whether or not they know the exploit ahead of time or not, it would be good to know someone is watching out for you for $20 a month. And you will be mad if you took Oct 15th off without it. I just check, I patched my instance on Oct 16th. Not sure what's going to happened. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 1:44 PM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability The vulnerability was discovered in the course of an audit by SektionEins, a German security firm, and immediately reported to the Drupal Security Team. Because this was a pretty obscure vulnerability with no reported exploits, the team decided to wait until the first scheduled release date after DrupalCon Amsterdam to put out the notice and patch. Obviously, they knew that once word of the vulnerability was announced, there would immediately be a wave of exploits, so they imposed a blackout on any mention of it before October 15th. I think that they stuck to their word. Of course, attacks started a few hours after the announcement. Cary On Oct 31, 2014, at 9:38 AM, Joe Hourcle onei...@grace.nascom.nasa.gov wrote: On Oct 31, 2014, at 11:46 AM, Lin, Kun wrote: Hi Cary, I don't know from whom. But for the heartbeat vulnerability earlier this year, they as well as some other big providers like Google and Amazon were notified and patched before it was announced. If they have an employee who contributes to the project, it's possible that this was discussed on development lists before it was sent down to user level mailing lists. Odds are, there's also some network of people who are willing to give things a cursory review / beta test in a more controlled manner before they're officially released (and might break thousands of websites). It would make sense that companies who derive a good deal of their profits in supporting software would participate in those programs, as well. I could see categorizing either of those as 'ahead of the *general* public', which was Kun's assertion. -Joe -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 11:10 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability How do they receive vulnerability report ahead of general public? From whom? Cary On Friday, October 31, 2014, Lin, Kun l...@cua.edu wrote: If you are using drupal as main website, consider using Cloudflare Pro. It's just $20 a month and worth it. They'll help block most attacks. And they usually receive vulnerability report ahead of general public. Kun -Original Message- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:;] On Behalf Of Cary Gordon Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 9:59 AM To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU javascript:; Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Terrible Drupal vulnerability This is what I posted to the Drupal4Lib list: By now, you should have seen https://www.drupal.org/PSA-2014-003 and heard about the Drupageddon exploits. and you may be wondering if you were vulnerable or iff you were hit by this, how you can tell and what you should do. Drupageddon affects Drupal 7, Drupal 8 and, if you use the DBTNG module, Drupal 6. The general recommendation is that if you do not know or are unsure of your server's security and you did not either update to Drupal 7.32 or apply the patch within a few hours of the notice, you should assume that your site (and server) was hacked and you should restore everything to a backup from before October 15th or earlier. If your manage your server and you have any doubts about your file security, you should restore that to a pre 10/15 image, as well or do a reinstall of your server software. I know this sounds drastic, and I know that not everyone will do that. There are some tests you can run on your server, but they can only verify the hacks that have been identified. At MPOW, we enforce file security on our production servers. Our deployments are scripted in our continuous integration system, and only that system can write files outside of the temporal file directory (e.g. /sites/site-name/files). We also forbid executables in the temporal file system. This prevents many exploits related to this issue. Of course, the attack itself is on the database, so even if the file system is not compromised, the attacker could, for example, get admin access to the site by creating an account, making it an admin, and sending themselves a password. While they need a valid email address to set the password, they would