Search

Chapter 1. Identifying security updates

download PDF

Keeping enterprise systems secure from current and future threats requires regular security updates. Red Hat Product Security provides the guidance you need to confidently deploy and maintain enterprise solutions.

1.1. What are security advisories?

Red Hat Security Advisories (RHSA) document the information about security flaws being fixed in Red Hat products and services.

Each RHSA includes the following information:

  • Severity
  • Type and status
  • Affected products
  • Summary of fixed issues
  • Links to the tickets about the problem. Note that not all tickets are public.
  • Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) numbers and links with additional details, such as attack complexity.

Red Hat Customer Portal provides a list of Red Hat Security Advisories published by Red Hat. You can display details of a specific advisory by navigating to the advisory’s ID from the list of Red Hat Security Advisories.

Figure 1.1. List of security advisories

Customer Portal: List of security advisories

Optionally, you can also filter the results by specific product, variant, version, and architecture. For example, to display only advisories for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8, you can set the following filters:

  • Product: Red Hat Enterprise Linux
  • Variant: All Variants
  • Version: 8
  • Optionally, select a minor version, such as 8.2.

1.2. Displaying security updates that are not installed on a host

You can list all available security updates for your system by using the yum utility.

Prerequisite

  • A Red Hat subscription is attached to the host.

Procedure

  • List all available security updates which have not been installed on the host:

    # yum updateinfo list updates security
    …
    RHSA-2019:0997 Important/Sec. platform-python-3.6.8-2.el8_0.x86_64
    RHSA-2019:0997 Important/Sec. python3-libs-3.6.8-2.el8_0.x86_64
    RHSA-2019:0990 Moderate/Sec.  systemd-239-13.el8_0.3.x86_64
    …

1.3. Displaying security updates that are installed on a host

You can list installed security updates for your system by using the yum utility.

Procedure

  • List all security updates which are installed on the host:

    # yum updateinfo list security --installed
    …
    RHSA-2019:1234 Important/Sec. libssh2-1.8.0-7.module+el8+2833+c7d6d092
    RHSA-2019:4567 Important/Sec. python3-libs-3.6.7.1.el8.x86_64
    RHSA-2019:8901 Important/Sec. python3-libs-3.6.8-1.el8.x86_64
    …

    If multiple updates of a single package are installed, yum lists all advisories for the package. In the previous example, two security updates for the python3-libs package have been installed since the system installation.

1.4. Displaying a specific advisory by using YUM

You can use the yum utility to display a specific advisory information that is available for an update.

Prerequisites

  • A Red Hat subscription is attached to the host.
  • You know the ID of the security advisory.
  • The update provided by the advisory is not installed.

Procedure

  • Display a specific advisory, for example:

    # yum updateinfo info RHSA-2019:0997
    ====================================================================
      Important: python3 security update
    ====================================================================
      Update ID: RHSA-2019:0997
           Type: security
        Updated: 2019-05-07 05:41:52
           Bugs: 1688543 - CVE-2019-9636 python: Information Disclosure due to urlsplit improper NFKC normalization
           CVEs: CVE-2019-9636
    Description: …
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.