Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-29 Thread Micah Anderson
Alvin Oga schrieb am Tuesday, den 28. June 2005:

 On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, Micah Anderson wrote:
 
  Alvin Oga schrieb am Tuesday, den 28. June 2005:
 
  If you are interested in testing security, then there is a group
  working on this project. Here is some information about the history of
  the team, and if you read through the message there is information
  about how to help:
  
  http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-announce/2005/03/msg00014.html
 
 saw that before ... and no response ... so i let it die,
 the assumption being, that people looking for helpers will reply
 to those volunteering, but i guess one has to pass the screeners
 requirements before getting onto the next level

You sent an email where about what and got no response? I did not see
your offer to help come across the mailing list (if it is there, can
you point out the URL to the message?)...

Often people looking for helpers are needing helpers because they are
so busy that they need people who are wanting to help to take
initiative, rather than be hand-held.

micah


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-29 Thread Alvin Oga

On Wed, 29 Jun 2005, Micah Anderson wrote:

 Alvin Oga schrieb am Tuesday, den 28. June 2005:
 
 You sent an email where about what and got no response? I did not see
 your offer to help come across the mailing list (if it is there, can
 you point out the URL to the message?)...

i think you can search thru the debian security archives just as
easily as i can or in fact even more easily since yu have a debian acct ??

in either case, it doesnt matter to me if people reply or not to those
that are volunteering
- i go on the assumption that people get selected based on
the merits or pecking order or friends of friends or ??
whatever the criteria is ..

- from this last batch of emails about security, i saw there
was a bunch of folks willing to help do security work ..
and i'm hoping somebody takes up the volunteer's offerings
and unload some tasks or do some other forms of methodology tests

 Often people looking for helpers are needing helpers because they are
 so busy that they need people who are wanting to help to take
 initiative, rather than be hand-held.

i don't want any handholding ... other than access the the resources
and info and/or question answer ..
- in my case, i'd like to create test-sec.debian.org
for which i cannot do anything about it unless i do get
some handholding and it's purpse to supplement the security
patches that i see is lacking in testing
( 2 or 3 months behind current releases is too far back for me )

and everybody is buzy... 
- first priority for me/us is paying customers as that is 
what keeps our expenses paid...
and than volunteer for folks(entities) that wants some help

c ya
alvin


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-29 Thread Petter Reinholdtsen

[Alvin Oga]
 i don't want any handholding ... other than access the the resources
 and info and/or question answer ..
   - in my case, i'd like to create test-sec.debian.org
   for which i cannot do anything about it unless i do get
   some handholding and it's purpse to supplement the security
   patches that i see is lacking in testing
   ( 2 or 3 months behind current releases is too far back for me )

Everybody have access to the resources used by the testing security
team.  If you start submitting updates there, I am sure your effort
will have positive effect.  There is no reason for you to wait for a
debian.org domain name.  If you want a new APT repository, you can
create it anywhere, and if it proves to be a good idea it can be made
available as test-sec.debian.org or something similar some time in the
future.

The information about the testing security team is available from
URL:http://secure-testing.alioth.debian.org/, and the subversion
repository used to track security issues is publicly available.  Patch
submission into BTS can be done by anyone, and NMUs can be prepared by
anyone for review and upload by any Debian developer.  I am convinced
several of the Debian developers in the testing security team are
willing to do uploads.  And, when the issue is completely investigated
and the patch is available, the work left for the stable security team
will be much reduced. :)

So, no need to wait, just go ahead.


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-29 Thread Micah Anderson
Alvin Oga schrieb am Wednesday, den 29. June 2005:

 
 On Wed, 29 Jun 2005, Micah Anderson wrote:
 
  Alvin Oga schrieb am Tuesday, den 28. June 2005:
  
  You sent an email where about what and got no response? I did not see
  your offer to help come across the mailing list (if it is there, can
  you point out the URL to the message?)...
 
 i think you can search thru the debian security archives just as
 easily as i can or in fact even more easily since yu have a debian acct ??

Did you read the email that I referenced? It doesn't sound like you
did. 

 in either case, it doesnt matter to me if people reply or not to those
 that are volunteering
   - i go on the assumption that people get selected based on
   the merits or pecking order or friends of friends or ??
   whatever the criteria is ..

The testing-security team is not operating this way.

   - from this last batch of emails about security, i saw there
   was a bunch of folks willing to help do security work ..
   and i'm hoping somebody takes up the volunteer's offerings
   and unload some tasks or do some other forms of methodology tests

I sent a message whose contents detail how to get involved in the
testing-security team for those who wish to volunteer. 

micah


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-29 Thread Alvin Oga

On Wed, 29 Jun 2005, Micah Anderson wrote:

  i think you can search thru the debian security archives just as
  easily as i can or in fact even more easily since yu have a debian acct ??
 
 Did you read the email that I referenced? It doesn't sound like you
 did. 

this is precisely why volunteers disappear

of course i read it ... the first yime you posted and the 2nd time when
you sent the same url again .. multiple times for how to volunteer

somehow, magically, volunteers can become overnight experts
and no handholding is needed at all or who is doing what

i think there has been enough about emails in here.. and since no
proactive direction is being made, i think i'll bow out of volunteering 
again .. but will gladly help later when things are more organized and
its clear what the benefits of volunteering hundred of hrs/month would be

thanx for your time in replies ... 

c ya
alvin


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-29 Thread Micah Anderson
Alvin Oga schrieb am Wednesday, den 29. June 2005:

 
 On Wed, 29 Jun 2005, Micah Anderson wrote:
 
   i think you can search thru the debian security archives just as
   easily as i can or in fact even more easily since yu have a debian acct ??
  
  Did you read the email that I referenced? It doesn't sound like you
  did. 
 
 this is precisely why volunteers disappear

I'm sorry I dont understand. Volunteers disappear because they read a
message detailing how to volunteer and then don't follow those
directions and then disappear? If someone wants to volunteer, then
they need to do the things that are detailed about how to get
involved, otherwise they are disappearing themselves.

I do not understand, the directions are clear, and I reproduce them
and the referenced URLs below:

Any with a interest in participating are welcome to join the team,
Debian Developers and others with the skills and desire to help. The
team can be contacted through its mailing list[14]. There is a second
mailing list[15] that receives commit messages to our repository. An
alioth project page[1] is also available. Have a read of this
message[16] if you are interested in participating, the details are
there about how to start helping check CANs on a regular basis.

http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/secure-testing-team
http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/secure-testing-commits
http://secure-testing.alioth.debian.org/
http://lists.debian.org/debian-security/2004/10/msg00166.html

I note that there is no message from you found on the
secure-testing-team mailing list. I am unable to find your alioth
account, did you sign up for one? Did you email the secure-testing
alioth project administrator to be added to the project? Did you check
out the svn repository? 

 of course i read it ... the first yime you posted and the 2nd time when
 you sent the same url again .. multiple times for how to volunteer

Please, where in the details about how to volunteer did you get stuck
so we can improve them? 

 somehow, magically, volunteers can become overnight experts
 and no handholding is needed at all or who is doing what

You do not need to be an expert, but you do need to be able to follow
directions that are detailed for you, if directions do not make sense,
ask and they will be cleared up. How magic do you want the process?

 i think there has been enough about emails in here.. and since no
 proactive direction is being made, i think i'll bow out of volunteering 
 again .. but will gladly help later when things are more organized and
 its clear what the benefits of volunteering hundred of hrs/month would be

The benefits of volunteering are also detailed in that email. What
sort of proactive direction are you expecting? I think you have it
backwards, the proactivity needs to come from you. You are right that
the group is still in its infancy in terms of being organized, but how
do you expect it to become organized? The only way it will become
organized in a volunteer organization is if the volunteers (read: this
can be you), proactively organize it. If you wish to wait until
everyone else has done the work to organize the group, and then you
want to come in and do something you may find that the group is
organized a way that you do not like and you will regret that you did
not help organize it the way you like.

Micah


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-29 Thread Alvin Oga


hi ya micah

- thanx for trying ... lets see what happens

On Wed, 29 Jun 2005, Micah Anderson wrote:

 Alvin Oga schrieb am Wednesday, den 29. June 2005:
  
  On Wed, 29 Jun 2005, Micah Anderson wrote:
... 
   Did you read the email that I referenced? It doesn't sound like you
   did. 
  
  this is precisely why volunteers disappear
 
 I'm sorry I dont understand.

i read more into your comment about having read the prev urls or not
which, like i said, i did read

 http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/secure-testing-team
 http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/secure-testing-commits
 http://secure-testing.alioth.debian.org/
 http://lists.debian.org/debian-security/2004/10/msg00166.html

i'll look thru hose later
 
 I note that there is no message from you found on the
 secure-testing-team mailing list.

i posted/replied in the debian-secuirty list when joey and crew
was previously looking for volunteers

 I am unable to find your alioth account, did you sign up for one?

dont have one

 Did you email the secure-testing
 alioth project administrator to be added to the project?

dont knwo the folks of who does what ..etc

 Did you check out the svn repository? 

nope ...


  of course i read it ... the first yime you posted and the 2nd time when
  you sent the same url again .. multiple times for how to volunteer
 
 Please, where in the details about how to volunteer did you get stuck
 so we can improve them? 

in my case... i suppose i'm the idiot ... since i want to do things
differently ...

- i'm interested in releasing xxx-latest.deb packages
for testing 

- latest kernel, latest apache, latest php, latest xxx
and in my case, and for our customers, being a month
or two out of date could be a very bad thing which is
why we're intrested in newer security methodology
and we already do our magic inhouse for the latest xxx
apps

- i'm assuming that the authors and package maintainers
are already doing their patches based on announced vulnerabilities
and exploits, and i'm wanting to avoid re-inventing that wheel

- thanx again for taking the time to reply..
  and i'll spend some time on the new urls
 
 The benefits of volunteering are also detailed in that email. What
 sort of proactive direction are you expecting?

at a minimum ..
- latest kernels in *.deb form from kernel.org
- latest apache from apache.org 
... endless list ..

 I think you have it
 backwards, the proactivity needs to come from you.

i'd like a place ( a server ) where all these packages can be kept

maybe we'd just need to start, similar to what nerim.net does with
mplayer*.deb

unfortunately, the suits wants patches all from debian.org
or inhouse, where, guess who ( me ) takes the ball and responsiblity
for inhouse packages vs importing from   tom-dic-n-harrry and
sally-mary-janes site

 You are right that
 the group is still in its infancy in terms of being organized,

its okay...  good to grow

 but how
 do you expect it to become organized?

replying to those wanting to volunteer is a good start... as yu have
been doing .. thanx for that

 The only way it will become
 organized in a volunteer organization is if the volunteers (read: this
 can be you), proactively organize it.

sometimes, us volunteers do NOT have the luxury to change the 
way things are done ... or even given 1 month to implement the next
big idea and see if it works or not ...

old ways are good ... its proven .. it works

if the old ways does NOT address new problems ... than somebody else
might solve those problems... and/or change distros

 If you wish to wait until
 everyone else has done the work to organize the group, and then you
 want to come in and do something you may find that the group is
 organized a way that you do not like and you will regret that you did
 not help organize it the way you like.

:-) .. thusly, i'm still here ... looking and watching

-- are you local ... ( silicon valley area ).. probably easier to talk
   face-to-face vs thru phophorous emissions
- and/or with any other security team volunteer 

c ya
alvin


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Marek Olejniczak

On Monday 27 June 2005 20:39, Marek Olejniczak wrote:

I don't understand the philosophy of Debian security team. It's really
so difficult to push into sarge spamassassin 3.0.4 which is not
vulnerable? This version is in Debian testing and why this version
can't be push into stable?


Seems that you don't understand the philosophy of the 'stable' release
either. The basic rule for stable is: no new upstream versions allowed.
This means security updates for spamassassin need to be backported to
3.0.3 (excluding any functional changes).

Even if 3.0.4 contains only the security fix, it will still be backported
and released as 3.0.3-1sarge1 or something like that.


For me stable distribution means secure. Is now Sarge secure? 
No, it isn't! Four weeks after new release of Debian, Sarge has many 
security holes in packages and kernel, and some of this holes are 
critical. In my opinion Sarge isn't stable distribution now, it's 
dangerous distribution.



---
Marek


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Moritz Muehlenhoff [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.0156 +0200]:
 Have a look at the system we use for the testing security team (I
 always thought it originated in the security team):
 http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/secure-testing-commits/2005-June/thread.html
 
 This system is so efficient that most communication is basically
 made through svn log messages.

Not meaning to disspell it, but isn't this essentially a bug
tracking system or ticket system done slightly differently?

What I think Debian (as a whole) needs is an improved issue tracker
with the following features:

  - single-bug subscription, through association with the bug (like
bugzilla)
  - ability to set a bug as private, meaning that only associated
people can view it or even find out about its existence.

add to that some automated way to open tickets for new CVEs and you
have a team todo list.

I know that this is not really what you guys want to hear and it's
probably best to adopt testing-security's approach for
stable-security. However, I am considering devoting more of my time
to this stuff in the future, and such a system would be needed for
some of the innovative approaches I have in mind. Thus, I'd love to
hear opinions.

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Marek Olejniczak [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.0854 +0200]:
 For me stable distribution means secure. Is now Sarge secure?
 No, it isn't!

Most installations are secure. I know security is a delicate topic,
but there is no point in polemic exaggeration.

 Four weeks after new release of Debian,

Get your facts straight.

 Sarge has many security holes in packages and kernel, and some of
 this holes are critical. In my opinion Sarge isn't stable
 distribution now, it's dangerous distribution.

Then don't use it.

We are working to fix it. The last thing we need now are people
complaining and moaning.

-- 
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Javier Fernández-Sanguino Peña
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 06:44:06PM -0400, Michael Stone wrote:
 On Tue, Jun 28, 2005 at 12:00:28AM +0200, martin f krafft wrote:
 Do you guys see this as a de facto state with no solution, or is
 a good solution simply waiting to be found?
 
 The security secretaries were originally going to be part of the
 solution, and there was talk from some people about writing a tracking
 system that didn't materialize. Mostly I think it just needs
 recognition that it's a problem that needs a solution.

When I approached the security team last year I was told that there was 
indeed a tracking system, it just could not be made public because it mixed 
both publicly known vulnerabilities (i.e. those other's have released 
advisories on) and non-public vulns (i.e. those discussed in vendor-sec or 
reported privately).

Regards

Javier


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread Alvin Oga

hi ya

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, Javier [iso-8859-1] Fernández-Sanguino Peña wrote:

lots of people have their own requiremetns for security ...

instead of adding to the security team's tasks, and instead of writting
emails, why don't we spend the time to write some scripts to do
what we're expecting to be done by the security team ??

- the security tasks are not that hard to implement
but does require time and some fore thought

- more importantly the testing prior to release of pacjkages
  should be 100% automated ... so that any volunteer can run
  the regression test suites prior to releasing patches

- there is NOT one right security solution but there will be many
  possible solutions

- yes.. i'm volunteering if there is enough folks that want to 
  solve security problems and automate security patch releases
- it's a task for debian-man .. more than what super-man or
bat-man can do

c ya
alvin




Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Marek Olejniczak

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, martin f krafft wrote:


also sprach Marek Olejniczak [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.0854 +0200]:

Sarge has many security holes in packages and kernel, and some of
this holes are critical. In my opinion Sarge isn't stable
distribution now, it's dangerous distribution.


Then don't use it.


I must use it. Sarge is working on a ISP production servers.


We are working to fix it. The last thing we need now are people
complaining and moaning.


I'm working for many ISP providers. And now I have problems with security 
on this servers. What can I do? I can't patch by hand every bug on many 
servers!


Other distros don't have such problems with security. I'm complain 
because I think it was mistake to install Debian Sarge on this 
servers. :-(



---
Marek


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Alvin Oga [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.1031 +0200]:
 lots of people have their own requiremetns for security ...

security *is* subjective.

 instead of adding to the security team's tasks, and instead of
 writting emails, why don't we spend the time to write some scripts
 to do what we're expecting to be done by the security team ??

thanks for the proposal. why did you write it and not just get on
with those scripts already?

 - yes.. i'm volunteering if there is enough folks that want to 
   solve security problems and automate security patch releases
   - it's a task for debian-man .. more than what super-man or
   bat-man can do

people volunteering are useless. people actually doing something
are not.

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Matthew Palmer
On Tue, Jun 28, 2005 at 10:36:34AM +0200, Marek Olejniczak wrote:
 On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, martin f krafft wrote:
 We are working to fix it. The last thing we need now are people
 complaining and moaning.
 
 I'm working for many ISP providers. And now I have problems with security 
 on this servers. What can I do? I can't patch by hand every bug on many 
 servers!

So don't.  Roll security-patched packages and run your own repository. 
Contribute your changes and experiences back to the BTS.  Hell, start an
alternative security updates archive.

 Other distros don't have such problems with security. I'm complain 
 because I think it was mistake to install Debian Sarge on this 
 servers. :-(

You're complaining to *us* because someone *else* made a decision you don't
agree with?  

- Matt


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Marek Olejniczak [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.1036 +0200]:
 Then don't use it.
 
 I must use it. Sarge is working on a ISP production servers.

I am sorry. The best I can tell you is that it currently looks as if
the situation will soon be under control and resolved. And soon is
likely to be very soon/this week.

 We are working to fix it. The last thing we need now are people
 complaining and moaning.
 
 I'm working for many ISP providers. And now I have problems with
 security on this servers. What can I do? I can't patch by hand
 every bug on many servers!

You have to.

 Other distros don't have such problems with security. I'm complain
 because I think it was mistake to install Debian Sarge on this
 servers. :-(

If that's what you think then it's best to reinstall these servers
with something else because that'll be cheaper than the risk of
having them compromised.

-- 
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 .''`. martin f. krafft [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Matthew Palmer [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.1104 +0200]:
  Other distros don't have such problems with security. I'm
  complain because I think it was mistake to install Debian Sarge
  on this servers. :-(
 
 You're complaining to *us* because someone *else* made a decision
 you don't agree with?  

No, he installed Sarge because it was cool back at the time.

I do wonder what kind of ISP switches to sarge right after the
release... those who need security probably stay with woody just
a little longer for all the childhood problems to resolve themselves
(read: sarge r1). That said... of course woody is currently also
potentially vulnerable.

-- 
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread Frans Pop
On Tuesday 28 June 2005 11:02, martin f krafft wrote:
  instead of adding to the security team's tasks, and instead of
  writting emails, why don't we spend the time to write some scripts
  to do what we're expecting to be done by the security team ??

 thanks for the proposal. why did you write it and not just get on
 with those scripts already?

  - yes.. i'm volunteering if there is enough folks that want to
solve security problems and automate security patch releases
  - it's a task for debian-man .. more than what super-man or
  bat-man can do

 people volunteering are useless. people actually doing something
 are not.

Hey! You were being so constructive and positive. Why are you now falling 
back to old fashioned Debian-like flaming?

Before you actually start something in an area like this I think it's 
perfectly fair to first mail the list and get reactions.

Maybe you should take a break and let others get their ideas into this 
thread. (Not saying that your contribution so far isn't appreciated.)

Cheers,
FJP


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Marek Olejniczak

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, Matthew Palmer wrote:


On Tue, Jun 28, 2005 at 10:36:34AM +0200, Marek Olejniczak wrote:

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, martin f krafft wrote:

We are working to fix it. The last thing we need now are people
complaining and moaning.


I'm working for many ISP providers. And now I have problems with security
on this servers. What can I do? I can't patch by hand every bug on many
servers!


You're complaining to *us* because someone *else* made a decision you don't
agree with?


No, it was *my* decision! I'm using Debian since 4 years and I like this 
distribution. And it suprised me that my favourite distro has problems 
with security.



---
Marek


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custom sec updates, was Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Thomas Seliger


Marek Olejniczak wrote:


I must use it. Sarge is working on a ISP production servers.


I work for a medium-sized company and moved nearly all our application 
hosting server from wind0ze and SuSE to Debian. Debian is our choice for 
production servers.


I'm working for many ISP providers. And now I have problems with 
security on this servers. What can I do? I can't patch by hand every bug 
on many servers!


I suggest you create your own apt server (basically its just a HTTPD), 
when you administer a larger number of servers, you often face the 
problem that you need to deploy customized packages to many machines. So 
using you own apt source in addition to the stable debian sources is the 
way to go IMHO.


Once you have such a thing in place, rolling out your own security 
patches / customisations on many systems gets much easier. I have my own 
apache, postgresql, java and jboss packages for example. I also 
distributed a patched version of sudo this way.


Even if you did not use those techniques (.deb building, running an apt 
source) up to now, I think its rewarding for you, especially if you run 
a larger number of servers. I do not have any links ready to point you 
to, but i'll check my (unsorted) bookmark file later ;)


Peace,
Tom


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Marek Olejniczak

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, martin f krafft wrote:


No, he installed Sarge because it was cool back at the time.


You are right - I'm waiting with installation on new servers for the new 
Debian release. On my other servers is runnig Woody.



That said... of course woody is currently also
potentially vulnerable.


Unfortunately you are right :-( At this moment there is no secure Debian 
distribution.


---
Marek


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Marek Olejniczak [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.1148 +0200]:
 No, it was *my* decision! I'm using Debian since 4 years and
 I like this distribution. And it suprised me that my favourite
 distro has problems with security.

It surprised everyone, even though it was not a real surprise -- if
that makes sense. The security team has been a major weakness of
Debian for a while. It was only a question of time until it all came
down on Joey.

Anyway, if you like Debian, then you should keep using it. The
current situation is unacceptable, and we are all aware of this. But
the good news is that a lot of people are working on it, and after
the stereotypical blow in the face, we'll have something to learn to
prevent such problems in the future.

So bear with us for just a little while more, consider disabling the
affected services for now, or roll your own security updates until
we caught up.

-- 
Please do not send copies of list mail to me; I read the list!
 
 .''`. martin f. krafft [EMAIL PROTECTED]
: :'  :proud Debian developer and author: http://debiansystem.info
`. `'`
  `-  Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing a system
 
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der beruf ist eine schutzwehr, hinter welche man sich erlaubterweise
 zurückziehen kann, wenn bedenken und sorgen allgemeiner art einen
 anfallen.
 - friedrich nietzsche


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Re: custom sec updates, was Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Thomas Seliger [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.1208 +0200]:
 Even if you did not use those techniques (.deb building, running an apt 
 source) up to now, I think its rewarding for you, especially if you run 
 a larger number of servers. I do not have any links ready to point you 
 to, but i'll check my (unsorted) bookmark file later ;)

man apt-ftparchive is all you basically need.

Put the files into a directory which apache can access, e.g.
/srv/apt -- http://server/apt, then run:

  apt-ftparchive packages .  Packages

and you're done. Make sure to set the proper permissions.

Now add

  deb http://server/apt ./

to your machines and `apt-get update`.

Finally, make sure to use the proper version incrememts. My
suggestion is the following shell function (part of
dpkg-reversion/debedit, which is not yet part of Debian):

  bump_version()
  {
VERSTR='+0.local.'
case $1 in
  *${VERSTR}[0-9]*)
REV=${1##*${VERSTR}}
echo ${1%${VERSTR}*}${VERSTR}$((++REV));;
  *-*)
echo ${1}${VERSTR}1;;
  *)
echo ${1}-0${VERSTR}1;;
esac
  }

piper:~ bump_version 1.0-1
1.0-1+0.local.1
piper:~ dpkg --compare-versions 1.0-1 lt 1.0-1+0.local.1  echo yes
yes
piper:~ dpkg --compare-versions 1.0-1+0.local.1 lt 1.0-2  echo yes
yes

piper:~ bump_version 1.0
1.0-0+0.local.1
piper:~ dpkg --compare-versions 1.0 lt 1.0-0+0.local.1  echo yes
yes
piper:~ dpkg --compare-versions 1.0-0+0.local.1 lt 1.0-1  echo yes
yes
piper:~ dpkg --compare-versions 1.0-0+0.local.1 lt 1.1  echo yes
yes

Alternatively, use APT pinning.

FWIW, my book[0] includes information about how to run your own
package repositories, and how to modify packages and properly
integrate them with APT.

  0. http://debiansystem.info

Cheers,

-- 
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 .''`. martin f. krafft [EMAIL PROTECTED]
: :'  :proud Debian developer and author: http://debiansystem.info
`. `'`
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man muss noch chaos in sich haben
um einen tanzenden stern zu gebähren.
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Marek Olejniczak [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.1215 +0200]:
 Unfortunately you are right :-( At this moment there is no secure
 Debian distribution.

unstable. :)

-- 
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 .''`. martin f. krafft [EMAIL PROTECTED]
: :'  :proud Debian developer and author: http://debiansystem.info
`. `'`
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obviously i was either onto something, or on something.
 -- larry wall on the creation of perl


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Florian Weimer
* Moritz Muehlenhoff:

 The whole embargo thing about stable security is overrated anyway;

Yes, that's my impression as well.

 as far as I can see it for May and June only mailutils, qpopper and
 ppxp were embargoed, so that they hadn't been publicly known when
 the DSA was published (and even for mailutils and qpopper there was
 a small time frame of 1-2 days between first vendor fix and the
 DSA).

The BSD telnet bug was embargoed as well, but it's not clear if Debian
had access to this information.

It's pretty strange that the disclosure of future BSD userland
vulnerabilities will likely be scheduled according to Microsoft's
needs.

 The majority of all issues could be handled a lot more transparent, IMO.

I agree.


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How to help the security team (was Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security)

2005-06-28 Thread Javier Fernández-Sanguino Peña
On Tue, Jun 28, 2005 at 11:48:23AM +0200, Marek Olejniczak wrote:
 No, it was *my* decision! I'm using Debian since 4 years and I like this 
 distribution. And it suprised me that my favourite distro has problems 
 with security.

Like any other *volunteer* project, there are ups and downs. Don't 
complain, help fix the problem instead. 

I'm amazed at how people are complaining about this. In other news: 
Microsoft doesn't publish advisories for known security vulnerabilities, it 
will wait even a full month (or more) to do so. And their security team is 
being *payed* for what they do.

I, for one, would actually appreciate if people instead of complaining in
this mailing list would go through the latest public vulnerabilities that
*might* affect Debian and provide a status report. You just need to pick a
vulnerability and ask yourself these questions:

a) how grave is this vulnerability? is it local or remote?
b) is an upstream patch is available?
c) does the vulnerability indeed affects Debian woody or sarge?
d) has it been reported in Debian's BTS? does it have a patch?
e) has a package fixing this has been uploaded to sid? is a package
waiting for approval from the security team?

Some information is available at
http://newraff.debian.org/~joeyh/stable-security.html but that's not 100%
accurate (as described in the header).

So, for starters, all you need is.

Vulnerability info, which is available at:

- Securityfocus Database: http://www.securityfocus.com/bid
- LWN's advisories (http://lwn.net/Alerts/) and vulnerabilities 
(http://lwn.net/Vulnerabilities/) 

The relevant Debian BTS entries should be tagged 'security' and can be 
found 
at:
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?which=tagdata=securityarchive=noexclude=potatoexclude=experimentalexclude=fixedexclude=wontfix

But, of course, the BTS entries for the relevant bugs should be reviewed 
too (people sometimes do not tag security bugs appropiately).

Also, past advisories with CVE references for Debian should be reviewed. 
They are found at:
http://www.debian.org/security/crossreferences

(Note: Bugtraq references in that page are not necessarily up-to-date as I
review these from time to time)

Here's a sample:

-

- Vulnerability: latest dbus vulnerability 
- Severity: High
- Type: local
- References: CAN-2005-0201, also BID-12345: 
http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/12435
[ not in Debian's CVE reference map ]
- Other references:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=146766
(includes test and patch)
- Affected version: 0.22 (based on other vendors alerts)
- Debian versions: 0.23.4-1 in sarge, 0.23.4-3 in sid, not present in woody 
(http://packages.qa.debian.org/d/dbus.html)

[ review of the source package to see if the bug is applied there ]
[  ] 
[ the code is fixed and upstream Changelog says that it was fixed 
in 2005-01-31  and included in the 2.3.1 ] 

Status: Debian is _not_ affected

Actions that need to be taken: none


Another example:



- Vulnerability: cacti - SQL injection and XSS
- Severity: High
- Type:remote
- References: CAN 2005-{1524,1525,1526}
- Other references: 
Gentoo advisory: http://www.gentoo.org/security/en/glsa/glsa-200506-20.xml
Gentoo Bug: http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=96243
Patch: 
http://www.cacti.net/downloads/patches/0.8.6d/cacti_0_8_6e_security.patch
- Affected version: prior to 0.8.6e
http://www.cacti.net/release_notes_0_8_6e.php
- Debian versions: 0.6.7-2.2 in oldstable, 0.8.6c-7 in stable, 0.8.6e-1 in 
testing/sid
- Bug reported:  #315703 (not tagged 'security')

[ Review oldstable code ]
[ Code is not affected to these vulnerabilities, the vulnerable code is not 
present ]

Status: Debian _is_ affected, a fix is pending approval from the 
security team upload

Actions that need to be taken:
a) tag 'security' the BTS entries



Now that you all know how to improve the situation and help why don't you
start doing it? Start with all the vulnerabilites in Joey's stable security
pages. Follow up with all the vulnerabilities which are not listed there
but are related to software present in Debian for which other vendors have
published advisories already.

And then send the reports to the security team CC'ing this list. I'm 
anxious to see how many who have voiced their concerns will end up 
publishing here a status report.

Regards

Javier


PS: I'm not adding Secunia to the vulnerability info since it's obviously 
not current / correct, see http://secunia.com/product/143/ for example.



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Re: How to help the security team (was Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security)

2005-06-28 Thread Harry
I picked one of the bugs (see bottom of email). Is
this sort of information is useful to the security
team and if so, how?





vulnerability: sudo race condition.
Severity: High
Type: local

References: 
CAN-2005-1993
BID:13993
URL:http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/13993
http://www.sudo.ws/sudo/alerts/path_race.html

Affected version: 1.3.1 up to and including 1.6.8p8.

Debian versions: 
woody: sudo_1.6.6-1.3
sarge: sudo_1.6.8p7-1.1
testing: sudo_1.6.8p7-1.1
unstable: sudo_1.6.8p7-1.1

No mention of the bug in the changelog:
http://smallr.com/so

Status: Debian is affected

Actions that need to be taken: 

Package Maintainer Action:
Create new sudo package version 1.6.8p9 or greater.
Request a patch from the maintainers.
http://www.sudo.ws/sudo/authors.html

User Action:
Upgrade: The bug is fixed in sudo 1.6.8p9. There is no
package available so a local build or install will be
required.

Current Workaround:
The administrator can order the sudoers file such that
all entries granting Sudo ALL privileges precede all
other entries.



Harry
Join team plico. 
http://www.hjackson.org/cgi-bin/folding/index.pl

__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
http://mail.yahoo.com 


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread Alvin Oga

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, Alvin Oga wrote:

 On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, martin f krafft wrote:
 
  thanks for the proposal. why did you write it and not just get on
  with those scripts already?

idea
if somebody at debian.org can create yaml, say [EMAIL PROTECTED],
than the rest of us moaners, complainers and wanna-volunteer can
get started ...

debian's gods can watch and see if they like or dislike what we're
doing and incorporate it into the main hierarchy or not

the machine can be called sec-test.debian.org so that we have
a way to test another security update/process/procedures out
/idea

personally, i pull down all the important tar balls from the originating
author's site and compile it ... if the distro's version of any app is
too far behind

flame suit on
c ya
alvin


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Alvin Oga [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.1420 +0200]:
 if somebody at debian.org can create yaml, say
 [EMAIL PROTECTED], than the rest of us moaners,
 complainers and wanna-volunteer can get started ...

Just use this list.

 the machine can be called sec-test.debian.org so that we have
 a way to test another security update/process/procedures out

Mh, I am not sure this is viable as you guys would probably need
root on the machine, which is a credibility problem when someone
else hosts it...

-- 
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 .''`. martin f. krafft [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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`. `'`
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we americans, we're a simple people... 
 but piss us off, and we'll bomb  your cities.
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread Alvin Oga

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, martin f krafft wrote:

 Just use this list.

i think the point of this list is its not moving fast
enough for some folks wanting security updates
 
  the machine can be called sec-test.debian.org so that we have
  a way to test another security update/process/procedures out
 
 Mh, I am not sure this is viable as you guys would probably need
 root on the machine, which is a credibility problem when someone
 else hosts it...

hosting a server is trivially simple... esp for a test server

point test-sec.debian.org to any ip# sitting on a t1 or t3 or
OC-xxx  and everybody can start working on it

- all other debian boxes does NOT trust it and nbody else should
  trust it either... it is for testing and development

c y
alvin


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Alvin Oga [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.1451 +0200]:
 - all other debian boxes does NOT trust it and nbody else should
 trust it either... it is for testing and development

I know. But what happens when someone decides to abuse it? I could
host a machine, no problem. But giving root access to others is the
problem.

-- 
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread Robert Lemmen
On Tue, Jun 28, 2005 at 05:20:51AM -0700, Alvin Oga wrote:
 personally, i pull down all the important tar balls from the originating
 author's site and compile it ... if the distro's version of any app is
 too far behind

the main point about stable security is that exactly this does not
happen: i want security fixes for the versions that i have installed,
not newer versions. and that's also were things get complicated...

cu  robert

-- 
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Joey Hess
martin f krafft wrote:
 Not meaning to disspell it, but isn't this essentially a bug
 tracking system or ticket system done slightly differently?

No, if it were a bug tracking system we could use the Debian BTS and not
bother with it. It's a vulnerability/non vulnerability tracking system;
we use it to not only track holes that affect testing, but just as
importantly, holes that do not. It allows us to know that every security
issue has been checked out by someone with no gaps (our historical
checks of all security holes since woody found holes that were missed
from being tracked in the BTS).

Of course it works with the BTS, and once the BTS gets version tracking
certain bits of it will become more automated.

-- 
see shy jo


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Adam Majer
martin f krafft wrote:

It surprised everyone, even though it was not a real surprise -- if
that makes sense. The security team has been a major weakness of
Debian for a while. It was only a question of time until it all came
down on Joey.

Anyway, if you like Debian, then you should keep using it. The
current situation is unacceptable, and we are all aware of this. But
the good news is that a lot of people are working on it, and after
the stereotypical blow in the face, we'll have something to learn to
prevent such problems in the future.

So bear with us for just a little while more, consider disabling the
affected services for now, or roll your own security updates until
we caught up.
  


I think this is a much better reply than telling people to
* use other distributions (Suse, RHEL, Fedora, Ubuntu, whatever),
* use sid, or
* roll your own security

I've been using Debian since Slink and I think this is one of the very
few times Debian was cought with its security pants down. I don't think
I am affected yet, with exception of spamassassin so let's hope Debian
can catch up before the next remote hole in squid, apache2 or racoon.

- Adam



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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-28 Thread Matt Zimmerman
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 08:39:43PM +0200, Marek Olejniczak wrote:

 On Mon, 27 Jun 2005, Matt Zimmerman wrote:
 
 The security team has always been a difficult one to expand.  A strong
 level of trust is necessary due to confidentiality issues, and security
 support is a lot of (mostly boring and thankless) work.  However,
 expanding it seems like the only way to make it sustainable.
 
 I don't understand the philosophy of Debian security team. It's really so
 difficult to push into sarge spamassassin 3.0.4 which is not vulnerable?
 This version is in Debian testing and why this version can't be push into
 stable?

This article does a fairly good job of explaining:

http://www.redhat.com/advice/speaks_backport.html

-- 
 - mdz


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread Micah Anderson
Alvin Oga schrieb am Tuesday, den 28. June 2005:

[snip]
 etch/testing where are the security patches ??
   - i want it to also have latest apps i care about
   ( latest kernels, latest apache, latest xxx, .. )
 
   - this is the parts i'm interested in structuring for security
   updates as some/most security patches are fixed in later releases
   from the originating authors/sites  and they already maintain
   and keep their eyes on all the announced vulnerabilities and
   exploits

If you are interested in testing security, then there is a group
working on this project. Here is some information about the history of
the team, and if you read through the message there is information
about how to help:

http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-announce/2005/03/msg00014.html

micah


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security - action

2005-06-28 Thread Alvin Oga


On Tue, 28 Jun 2005, Micah Anderson wrote:

 Alvin Oga schrieb am Tuesday, den 28. June 2005:

 If you are interested in testing security, then there is a group
 working on this project. Here is some information about the history of
 the team, and if you read through the message there is information
 about how to help:
 
 http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-announce/2005/03/msg00014.html

saw that before ... and no response ... so i let it die,
the assumption being, that people looking for helpers will reply
to those volunteering, but i guess one has to pass the screeners
requirements before getting onto the next level

c ya
alvin


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Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread W. Borgert
Just FYI: The well-known German Heise Newsticker (IT related) has an
article today with the title Debian without security update for
several weeks: http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/61076
Hm, bad reputation for us...


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Jan Wagner
On Monday 27 June 2005 15:25, W. Borgert wrote:
 Just FYI: The well-known German Heise Newsticker (IT related) has an
 article today with the title Debian without security update for
 several weeks: http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/61076
 Hm, bad reputation for us...

This was only a question of time .. :(

Regrads, Jan.
-- 
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GIT d-- s+: a-- C+++ UL P+ L+++ E- W+++ N+++ o++ K++ w---
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G++ e++ h-- r+++ y+++
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Carl-Eric Menzel
On Mon, 27 Jun 2005 15:50:19 +0200, Jan Wagner [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
 On Monday 27 June 2005 15:25, W. Borgert wrote:
  Just FYI: The well-known German Heise Newsticker (IT related) has an
  article today with the title Debian without security update for
  several weeks: http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/61076
  Hm, bad reputation for us...
 
 This was only a question of time .. :(

Does anybody know what the actual problem is, i.e. why there are no
updates?

Carl-Eric


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Martin Lohmeier
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

Carl-Eric Menzel wrote:
 Does anybody know what the actual problem is, i.e. why there are no
 updates?
 
 Carl-Eric
 
 

Hi,

problem: http://www.infodrom.org/~joey/log/?200506142140

In the discussion on the heise.de article people mentioned [1] the
security team (Martin Schulze) has been at LinuxTag and so he had no
time to get s.d.o working -- not enough active member in the security team.

by, Martin

[1]
http://www.heise.de/security/news/foren/go.shtml?read=1msg_id=8278429forum_id=80872

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Jan Lühr
Greetings,

Am Montag, 27. Juni 2005 15:54 schrieb Carl-Eric Menzel:
 On Mon, 27 Jun 2005 15:50:19 +0200, Jan Wagner [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
  On Monday 27 June 2005 15:25, W. Borgert wrote:
   Just FYI: The well-known German Heise Newsticker (IT related) has an
   article today with the title Debian without security update for
   several weeks: http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/61076
   Hm, bad reputation for us...
 
  This was only a question of time .. :(

 Does anybody know what the actual problem is, i.e. why there are no
 updates?

This is not an actual problem, this problem is rather imho structual. In 
it's last one to two years Woody was starving out of security updates. 
(Samba, Mozilla, Kernel, etc.). 

Keep smiling
yanosz


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Bob Tanner
On Monday 27 June 2005 09:53 am, Martin Lohmeier wrote:
 time to get s.d.o working -- not enough active member in the security
 team.

How would one go about getting on the security team?

If the entry into the security team is as convoluted as becoming a debian 
developer I understand why the security team does not have enough active 
members.

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Adam Majer
Bob Tanner wrote:

How would one go about getting on the security team?

If the entry into the security team is as convoluted as becoming a debian 
developer I understand why the security team does not have enough active 
members.
  

I would assume you need to be a DD before you can join the security team.

- Adam


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
[cc'ing -project]

also sprach W. Borgert [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.27.1525 +0200]:
 Just FYI: The well-known German Heise Newsticker (IT related) has an
 article today with the title Debian without security update for
 several weeks: http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/61076
 Hm, bad reputation for us...

It was only a question of time. I had asked Joey publicly about this
at Linuxtag, so it's likely that this is the reason for the coverage
by Heise. While I did not want to push Joey into a corner, it was
quite scary to hear him explain that due to his involvement with
Linuxtag, he did not even find the time to read his email. This is
not to blame Joey (without whom we wouldn't be where we are), but
rather a plea for the Debian project to take *immediate* action. If
Joey does not have time, security support just comes to
a screetching halt. Talk about a bottleneck!

Our security team currently consists of five members and two
sectretaries. Joey is hopelessly overworked, but he is still doing
a marvelous job. I do not know anything about the other members as
they do not seem to be very active, neither on IRC nor on the
mailing lists.

The problem is that access to security.debian.org is restricted.
Well, that's a good thing. But it's a problem when it comes to
bottleneck situations as in the current case, when Joey is too
occupied to handle his tasks as security team leader. I don't blame
him at all. Without him, there would probably be far less Linuxtag,
and he is after all not committed to spend 24 hours of his days on
Debian!

But I do wonder: if Joey was busy for two weeks and
security.debian.org was not working right, what did the other four
members and the two secretaries do?

I think we all agree that we cannot go on like this. We need to add
a lot of redundancy to the team. And with that, I don't mean the one
or two new members Joey promised in his answer to me. With that,
I mean that the size of the archive calls for a security team of 20
people or more.

Security is a delicate domain since Debian does need to ensure
a level of privacy, so calling for complete openness as with other
projects won't work. Obviously, we can't just appoint the first 20
to raise their hands. But what we can do is figure out the skills
needed to successfully work with the team and ensure Debian's
quality.

So far, these requirements have been very unclear to me, at least.
There have been times when I was very active, monitoring security
forums and fixing bugs, but the security team never approached me
for help. I do teach security to the professional audience for five
years now, so I would actually claim to have at least the necessary
foundation upon which I can quickly learn to adapt to the processes
of the security team.

I am sure I am not the only one. And I am also sure not to be the
only one without a clue what to do. In general, my experience has
been that [EMAIL PROTECTED] is a black hole, and that offers to
help are ignored. Of course, the Debian meritocracy calls for us to
just do something to rise the ladder according to our
accomplishments, but as with the other obscure domains of the Debian
project, which are not open to anyone to just peek at and learn,
it's really difficult to do this when it means working as a blind
person with a couple of mutes.

So at the end of this very long post, I guess I get in line with all
the other folks who'd like to have a statement from the other
members of the security team about what's going on.

At the same time, though, I think we need to take immediate action.
Among the first steps would be the analysis of the status quo. I am
going through the list of CVEs right now. There are *loads*. And
I could need help. I'll ping out to joeyh to see if we could put his
scripts for testing-security to any use.

As soon as we have a list of issues, everyone involved in security
issues should get on the debian-security list (that's what we have)
and add references to bug reports, or open new discussion threads.
From there, we should try to create fixed packages one after the
other and do everything we can to make it as easy as possible for
Joey to upload.

Once we've come back to normal, we should then see what to do about 

Thanks for your patience.

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Bob Tanner [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.27.1939 +0200]:
 How would one go about getting on the security team?

Current practice is: you don't. The security team advises you to
send notices and patches their way. At any point, they may invite
people who have made significant contributions to join their ranks.

I don't know more details and would love to find out.

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Matt Zimmerman
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 01:10:10PM -0500, Adam Majer wrote:

 are happy the fix will not mess up current functionality. How many
 people do we need on the actual security team? The current listing states,
 
 # Security Team -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  /member/ Martin Schulze
  /member/ Wichert Akkerman
  /member/ Daniel Jacobowitz
  /member/ Michael Stone
  /member/ Matt Zimmerman
  /secretary/ Noah Meyerhans
  /secretary/ Steve Kemp
 
 Is this enough?

I expect it would be enough if they were all active, but that has never been
the case for this group.  Wichert, Daniel, Michael and myself are all de
facto inactive for various reasons, and have been for some time.

The security team has always been a difficult one to expand.  A strong level
of trust is necessary due to confidentiality issues, and security support is
a lot of (mostly boring and thankless) work.  However, expanding it seems
like the only way to make it sustainable.

-- 
 - mdz


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Stefan Fritsch
On Monday 27 June 2005 20:26, Matt Zimmerman wrote:
 I expect it would be enough if they were all active, but that has
 never been the case for this group.  Wichert, Daniel, Michael and
 myself are all de facto inactive for various reasons, and have been
 for some time.

And according to Steve Kemp, the secretaries can't push out updates. 
Which leaves us with Joey.

Maybe it would be a good first step turn the secretaries to full 
members (if they want that)? But I agree with Martin F. Krafft that 
the security team should have quite a few more members.

Cheers,
Stefan



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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Noah Meyerhans
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 11:26:37AM -0700, Matt Zimmerman wrote:
 The security team has always been a difficult one to expand.  A strong level
 of trust is necessary due to confidentiality issues, and security support is
 a lot of (mostly boring and thankless) work.  However, expanding it seems
 like the only way to make it sustainable.

Even allowing uploads from the secretaries could be helpful.  Steve Kemp
has done a lot of good work in his role as secretary (much more than
I've ever done).  In cases where Joey is offline for an extended period
of time, having Steve or myself perform uploads might make the most
sense.  We already have some state WRT the current issues, and have all
the same patches that Joey has.  It's mostly a matter of coordinating
releases with other vendors and making sure that the newly released
package has the right changes applied and has a sane version number.

Part of the problem with security updates has to do with the fact that
it's just difficult to coordinate the work.  Even when Wichert, mdz, and
others were more active, Joey still did most of the work because it was
often easier for one person to keep track of everything.  The secretary
position was originally created to help this situation, but it was never
really clear to me what my role was supposed to be.

noah



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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Marek Olejniczak

On Mon, 27 Jun 2005, Matt Zimmerman wrote:


The security team has always been a difficult one to expand.  A strong level
of trust is necessary due to confidentiality issues, and security support is
a lot of (mostly boring and thankless) work.  However, expanding it seems
like the only way to make it sustainable.


I don't understand the philosophy of Debian security team. It's really so 
difficult to push into sarge spamassassin 3.0.4 which is not vulnerable? 
This version is in Debian testing and why this version can't be push into 
stable?



---
Marek


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Steve Kemp
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 02:36:12PM -0400, Noah Meyerhans wrote:

 Even allowing uploads from the secretaries could be helpful. 

  Definitely.  

  I've got fixed packages available right now for some of the 
 bugs which have been raised in this thread, but until somebody
 can push out the advisories they're just sat around gathering dust.

 Part of the problem with security updates has to do with the fact that
 it's just difficult to coordinate the work.

  That's probably true, and kinda an argument against suddenly adding
 more members too ...

 The secretary position was originally created to help this situation, 
 but it was never really clear to me what my role was supposed to be.

  I admit the role of the position is also a mystery to me, but one
 that I've not worried too much about.

  Reviewing patches and building fixed packages is what I've tried
 to do - whether that is the intended job of a secretary is largely
 irrelevent.

  Other jobs like answering mails from people who say Help my
 server is hacked seem more secreatrial in nature, so I've tried 
 to answer those as time and details permit.

Steve
--
www.steve.org.uk


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Steve Kemp
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 08:39:43PM +0200, Marek Olejniczak wrote:

 I don't understand the philosophy of Debian security team. It's really so 
 difficult to push into sarge spamassassin 3.0.4 which is not vulnerable? 
 This version is in Debian testing and why this version can't be push into 
 stable?

  In some cases fixing a problem, which an upstream will not, or
 which the package maintainer cannot is *very* hard work.  (eg. Mozilla/
 Kernel images).

  In this particular case pushing the package itself isn't a hard
 job - the problem we're currently seeing isn't that the job is
 hard, but that only a very small number of people have the 
 authority/ability to push the update out.

Steve
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Sven Mueller
Matt Zimmerman wrote on 27/06/2005 20:26:
 On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 01:10:10PM -0500, Adam Majer wrote: 
 
are happy the fix will not mess up current functionality. How many
people do we need on the actual security team? The current listing states,

# Security Team -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 /member/ Martin Schulze
 /member/ Wichert Akkerman
 /member/ Daniel Jacobowitz
 /member/ Michael Stone
 /member/ Matt Zimmerman
 /secretary/ Noah Meyerhans
 /secretary/ Steve Kemp

Is this enough?
 
 I expect it would be enough if they were all active, but that has never been
 the case for this group.  Wichert, Daniel, Michael and myself are all de
 facto inactive for various reasons, and have been for some time.

So what you are saying is basically:
The security team currently is Martin Schulze who has two secretaries
(whatever a secretary for the security team might do).

 The security team has always been a difficult one to expand.  A strong level
 of trust is necessary due to confidentiality issues, and security support is
 a lot of (mostly boring and thankless) work. 

Like I said in another mail, the security team should probably consist
of two groups (which migt have some intersection). However the level of
trust needed to get on the security team shouldn't be so high that only
one active member is on the team. Given the size of Debian and the fact
that the only remaining active member of the team is overworked due to
his many activities in Debian (I thank him for everything he does and
did), I would say that at least five new members should be found for the
team.

 However, expanding it seems like the only way to make it sustainable.

Obviously. And I also have to say: If you haven't been active on the
team for some time, you should have made that clear on the listing. I
really can't understand how you (as a group) could let it get this far.
If most of the group is inactive, you should at least find the time to
accept some new members into the group (and I know many have offered
their help).
I understand that there needs to be some level of trust, so you probably
should appoint some person you can trust for one reason or another.
However, while I see that a high level of trust is needed for access to
non-public security lists, I don't see why Debian as a whole should
require a substantly higher level of trust for security uploads than for
normal uploads. Though I wouldn't want every maintainer to have the
ability to directly upload to security.d.o, I wouldn't have a problem
assigning an almost random number of them the ability and responsibility
to do so.

BTW: If he accepted, I would recommend Martin F. Krafft to get on the team.

cu,
sven


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Matt Zimmerman [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.27.2026 +0200]:
 I expect it would be enough if they were all active, but that has
 never been the case for this group.  Wichert, Daniel, Michael and
 myself are all de facto inactive for various reasons, and have
 been for some time.

I, for one, very much appreciate your directness and prompt answer
on this matter, Matt!

 The security team has always been a difficult one to expand.
 A strong level of trust is necessary due to confidentiality
 issues, and security support is a lot of (mostly boring and
 thankless) work.  However, expanding it seems like the only way to
 make it sustainable.

Yes. Let me ask you this: what would you deem the ideal size of the
team? In the beginning you said 5-7 would be enough. Would you make
it bigger if you could?

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Frans Pop
On Monday 27 June 2005 20:39, Marek Olejniczak wrote:
 I don't understand the philosophy of Debian security team. It's really
 so difficult to push into sarge spamassassin 3.0.4 which is not
 vulnerable? This version is in Debian testing and why this version
 can't be push into stable?

Seems that you don't understand the philosophy of the 'stable' release 
either. The basic rule for stable is: no new upstream versions allowed.
This means security updates for spamassassin need to be backported to 
3.0.3 (excluding any functional changes).

Even if 3.0.4 contains only the security fix, it will still be backported 
and released as 3.0.3-1sarge1 or something like that.


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Noah Meyerhans [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.27.2036 +0200]:
 Part of the problem with security updates has to do with the fact
 that it's just difficult to coordinate the work.  Even when
 Wichert, mdz, and others were more active, Joey still did most of
 the work because it was often easier for one person to keep track
 of everything.

Sounds like an issue of workflow management to me. I want to have
a lot of discussions on this topic at debconf anyway, so there's one
concrete domain in need of proper CSCW (computer-supported
cooperative work).

 The secretary position was originally created to help this
 situation, but it was never really clear to me what my role was
 supposed to be.

I never understood it either.

How much information can be disclosed about the inner workings of
the security team without damage?

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Frans Pop [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.27.2105 +0200]:
 Even if 3.0.4 contains only the security fix, it will still be backported 
 and released as 3.0.3-1sarge1 or something like that.

That's actually not guaranteed. If 3.0.4 contains only the security
fix and really nothing else, I see no reason why it cannot be
uploaded to security.debian.org. The reason why usually
(V-1)-1sarge-1 is chosen for the version number is so that if 3.0.4
is still current by the time the next stable goes out, it will be an
upgrade candidate. In this case, the delta would be zero, which
would make it nonsensical and unnecessary to change the version
number in the first place.

Then again, I am not sure about this... just speculating.

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Jan Lühr
Greetings,

Am Montag, 27. Juni 2005 20:10 schrieb Adam Majer:
 Jan Lühr wrote:
 Greetings,
 
 Am Montag, 27. Juni 2005 15:54 schrieb Carl-Eric Menzel:
 Does anybody know what the actual problem is, i.e. why there are no
 updates?
 
 This is not an actual problem, this problem is rather imho structual. In
 it's last one to two years Woody was starving out of security updates.
 (Samba, Mozilla, Kernel, etc.).

 These are much less of a problem since they deal with either Intranet
 only applications (Samba), client side applications (mozilla) or the
 kernel that one usually rolls their own for their servers. What I really
 care about from Debian security team is up-to-date fixes for server
 applications that can be exposed to the Internet. For example, apache,
 squid, spamassassin, postfix, sendmail, exim, etc...

I'm not refering to exploits / bugs in general. I'm refering to the 
patch-port-situation in Debian.

Keep smiling
yanosz



Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Noah Meyerhans
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 09:05:53PM +0200, martin f krafft wrote:
 
 How much information can be disclosed about the inner workings of
 the security team without damage?

Most, but not all, of the security team's work is rather routing and
very uninteresting.  Often it is necessary to review code and verify
that it does actually fix a given problem.  That can be very difficult,
and is often made more difficult by the fact that we're dealing with
older and no longer supported upstream versions.  Package maintainers
are routinely enlisted to help with the process, though, under the
assumption that they are more familiar with the code than is the
security team.

IMHO, the security secretaries should be the ones keeping track of
builds and releasing DSAs once all the packages are updated.  This
doesn't require any particular skill, and is ideally suited to the roll
of a secretary. (though, when trying to do that kind of work, I've
always found that I'm a whole lot better at hacking than I am at
secretarial work; I suspect that's the case with a lot of developers)

noah



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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
 At the same time, though, I think we need to take immediate action.
 Among the first steps would be the analysis of the status quo. I am
 going through the list of CVEs right now. There are *loads*. And
 I could need help. I'll ping out to joeyh to see if we could put his
 scripts for testing-security to any use.

Ah, thanks to the testing-security team:

  http://newraff.debian.org/~joeyh/demo.html

This list is about testing, but joeyh is adding
  http://newraff.debian.org/~joeyh/stable-security.html
right now.

Anyway, note that the situation seems to be under control already
and an announcement is under preparation. Therefore I apologise for
coming across a little hectical in my post.

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Noah Meyerhans [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.27.2116 +0200]:
 of a secretary. (though, when trying to do that kind of work,
 I've always found that I'm a whole lot better at hacking than I am
 at secretarial work; I suspect that's the case with a lot of
 developers)

Barring that I don't have much experience as a secretary, I would
actually have to say that it's the other way around for me. I tend
to be good at organisation and correspondence, and while I like to
hack, it usually takes too much time for me, since I am
a perfectionist.

Yeah, uh, so... /things you may not actually care about

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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Paul Hink
Adam Majer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Jan Lühr wrote:

 In it's last one to two years Woody was starving out of security
 updates.  (Samba, Mozilla, Kernel, etc.).

 These are much less of a problem since they deal with either Intranet
 only applications (Samba),

Intranet is not a synonym for trusted network.

 client side applications (mozilla)

Having one's workstation compromised (e.g. due to some vulnerability of
Mozilla) is a serious thing. There might be confidential data (e.g.
private e-mails) stored on it and in many cases it makes compromising a
server much easier as well (e.g. by logging SSH passwords or stealing
private SSH keys and their passphrases).

 or the kernel that one usually rolls their own for their servers.

If the kernel images provided by Debian (stable) are to be considered
insecure that fact should be stated in clear and simple words where it
will most definitely be recognized by all of its users.

Paul


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Adam Majer
Steve Kemp wrote:

On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 02:36:12PM -0400, Noah Meyerhans wrote:

  

Even allowing uploads from the secretaries could be helpful. 



  Definitely.  

  I've got fixed packages available right now for some of the 
 bugs which have been raised in this thread, but until somebody
 can push out the advisories they're just sat around gathering dust.
  

I would be very happy if Steven could become a full member of the
security team. We need someone there that is responsive and can do the
work. I know that Steven was doing a bit of code reviewing as part of a
Debian Security Audit Project (http://www.nl.debian.org/security/audit/).

Part of the problem with security updates has to do with the fact that
it's just difficult to coordinate the work.



  That's probably true, and kinda an argument against suddenly adding
 more members too ...
  

There should not be major changes, but the structure of the security
team should remain current. Inactive members *should* be removed
promptly and be replaced by more active members of the Debian Developer
community.

- Adam




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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Michael Stone

On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 02:36:12PM -0400, Noah Meyerhans wrote:

Part of the problem with security updates has to do with the fact that
it's just difficult to coordinate the work.  Even when Wichert, mdz, and
others were more active, Joey still did most of the work because it was
often easier for one person to keep track of everything.


That's exactly it. There's no effective tracking of security problems,
and some people don't see this as a problem. That makes it extremely
difficult for others to see what needs to be done.

Mike Stone


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Michael Stone

On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 07:43:50PM +0100, Steve Kemp wrote:

 In some cases fixing a problem, which an upstream will not, or
which the package maintainer cannot is *very* hard work.  (eg. Mozilla/
Kernel images).


Damn near impossible, in the case of mozilla. I trolled several times on
debian-security for someone to put something together, and never got a
nibble.

Mike Stone


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Ulf Harnhammar
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 07:36:50PM +, Paul Hink wrote:
 Having one's workstation compromised (e.g. due to some vulnerability of
 Mozilla) is a serious thing. There might be confidential data (e.g.
 private e-mails) stored on it and in many cases it makes compromising a
 server much easier as well (e.g. by logging SSH passwords or stealing
 private SSH keys and their passphrases).

From a company/organisation's point of view, this might be almost as serious
as getting root. If you're a system administrator, you really don't want
people to get root on the machine. If you're the CEO, you're mostly concerned
with not letting outsiders read and/or write secret documents, which the
users often store in /home/*. Cracking the right workstation might allow an
attacker to access all the documents they want.

(Something completely different: the Debian Security Audit Project have talked
about auditing all of base, to make sure it's reasonably secure. Any volunteers
are very welcome, as we're just three active members at the moment.)

// Ulf


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Ulf Harnhammar
On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 09:05:20PM +0200, Frans Pop wrote:
 Even if 3.0.4 contains only the security fix

It doesn't, BTW:

http://wiki.apache.org/spamassassin/changes304

// Ulf


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Michael Stone [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.27.2251 +0200]:
 On Mon, Jun 27, 2005 at 02:36:12PM -0400, Noah Meyerhans wrote:
 Part of the problem with security updates has to do with the fact that
 it's just difficult to coordinate the work.  Even when Wichert, mdz, and
 others were more active, Joey still did most of the work because it was
 often easier for one person to keep track of everything.
 
 That's exactly it. There's no effective tracking of security problems,
 and some people don't see this as a problem. That makes it extremely
 difficult for others to see what needs to be done.

Do you guys see this as a de facto state with no solution, or is
a good solution simply waiting to be found?

-- 
Please do not send copies of list mail to me; I read the list!
 
 .''`. martin f. krafft [EMAIL PROTECTED]
: :'  :proud Debian developer and author: http://debiansystem.info
`. `'`
  `-  Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing a system
 
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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach martin f krafft [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.27.2100 +0200]:
 There is a problem with that, namely responsible disclosure. The
 team cannot be too big or else the other organisations in the
 consortium will object for danger of leakage.
 
 I think what we do need though is an infrastructure which makes it
 easier for people to contribute on public issues.

Petter Reinholdtsen added the following over at -project
(forwarded with permission)

  There already exist a larger team monitoring security lists, CVE
  reports, fixing bugs and helping maintainers fixing bugs etc.  It
  works in public, and accept help for everyone interested in
  participating.  It is the testing security team,
  URL:http://secure-testing.alioth.debian.org/.  I believe that
  all people interested in helping out with the security work in
  Debian should make an effort in this team.

  This will directly help the security status of Debian unstable and
  testing (security fixes for testing are normally uploaded into
  unstable), and indirectly help the stable security team as this
  team get a list of security issues to track, proposed patches,
  knowledge about the security issues discovered, and thus less work
  fixing the publicly known security issues.  In addition, it can
  form a good recruitment base for the stable security team.  Those
  proving themselves in the public work with testing security, will
  be good candidates for the stable security team.

  Isn't this a good way to do it?

... nothing to add.

-- 
Please do not send copies of list mail to me; I read the list!
 
 .''`. martin f. krafft [EMAIL PROTECTED]
: :'  :proud Debian developer and author: http://debiansystem.info
`. `'`
  `-  Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing a system
 
Invalid/expired PGP subkeys? Use subkeys.pgp.net as keyserver!
 
when a gentoo admin tells me that the KISS principle is good for
 'busy sysadmins', and that it's not an evolutionary step backwards,
 i wonder whether their tape is already running backwards.


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Michael Stone

On Tue, Jun 28, 2005 at 12:00:28AM +0200, martin f krafft wrote:

Do you guys see this as a de facto state with no solution, or is
a good solution simply waiting to be found?


The security secretaries were originally going to be part of the
solution, and there was talk from some people about writing a tracking
system that didn't materialize. Mostly I think it just needs
recognition that it's a problem that needs a solution.

Mike Stone


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Michael Stone [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005.06.28.0044 +0200]:
 The security secretaries were originally going to be part of the
 solution, and there was talk from some people about writing
 a tracking system that didn't materialize. Mostly I think it just
 needs recognition that it's a problem that needs a solution.

So if we all recognise it as a problem, it will solve itself?

Wouldn't a ticket system (possibly request-tracker3) be helpful
here?

-- 
Please do not send copies of list mail to me; I read the list!
 
 .''`. martin f. krafft [EMAIL PROTECTED]
: :'  :proud Debian developer and author: http://debiansystem.info
`. `'`
  `-  Debian - when you have better things to do than fixing a system
 
Invalid/expired PGP subkeys? Use subkeys.pgp.net as keyserver!
 
the word yellow wandered through his mind in search of something to
 connect with.
 -- hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Moritz Muehlenhoff
In gmane.linux.debian.devel.security, you wrote:
Part of the problem with security updates has to do with the fact that
it's just difficult to coordinate the work.  Even when Wichert, mdz, and
others were more active, Joey still did most of the work because it was
often easier for one person to keep track of everything.

 That's exactly it. There's no effective tracking of security problems,
 and some people don't see this as a problem. That makes it extremely
 difficult for others to see what needs to be done.

Have a look at the system we use for the testing security team (I always
thought it originated in the security team):
http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/secure-testing-commits/2005-June/thread.html

This system is so efficient that most communication is basically made
through svn log messages.

A similar way would be very nice for stable security support as well.
The whole embargo thing about stable security is overrated anyway; as far
as I can see it for May and June only mailutils, qpopper and ppxp were
embargoed, so that they hadn't been publicly known when the DSA was published
(and even for mailutils and qpopper there was a small time frame of 1-2 days
between first vendor fix and the DSA).
The majority of all issues could be handled a lot more transparent, IMO.

Cheers,
Moritz


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Re: Bad press related to (missing) Debian security

2005-06-27 Thread Michael Stone

On Tue, Jun 28, 2005 at 01:29:12AM +0200, martin f krafft wrote:

So if we all recognise it as a problem, it will solve itself?


Nothing's useful if people won't use it.

Mike Stone


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