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4.58. httpd
Updated httpd packages that fix one bug are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.
The httpd packages provide the Apache HTTP Server, a powerful, efficient, and extensible web server.
Bug Fix
- BZ#825675
- Due to a bug in the "mod_cache" module, an unexpected "304 Not Modified" HTTP response could be incorrectly returned to the client on non-conditional HTTP GET requests. With this update, the "mod_cache" module has been modified to correctly handle 304 responses, which are not returned in this scenario.
All users of httpd are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which fix this bug.
Updated httpd packages that fix two bugs are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.
The httpd packages provide the Apache HTTP Server, a powerful, efficient, and extensible web server.
Bug Fixes
- BZ#873677
- Due to a bug in the "mod_mem_cache" module, an aborted HTTP connection could result in a cached entity becoming corrupt. With this update, the "mod_mem_cache" module has been fixed to correctly handle aborted connections, avoiding cache corruption in this scenario.
- BZ#873730
- Due to a bug in the "mod_cache" module, the "304 Not Modified" response from an origin server was not properly handled when a cached entity was being refreshed. Consequently, the entity could be returned to the HTTP client with incorrect headers. With this update, the "mod_cache" module has been modified to correctly handle headers in the "304 Not Modified" response. The cached entity is now returned with correct headers in this scenario.
All users of httpd are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which fix these bugs.
Updated httpd packages that fix multiple security issues, various bugs, and add enhancements are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.
The Red Hat Security Response Team has rated this update as having low security impact. Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) base score, which gives a detailed severity rating, is available for each vulnerability from the CVE link(s) associated with each description below.
The httpd packages contain the Apache HTTP Server (httpd), which is the namesake project of The Apache Software Foundation.
Security Fix
- CVE-2008-0455, CVE-2008-0456, CVE-2012-2687
- Input sanitization flaws were found in the mod_negotiation module. A remote attacker able to upload or create files with arbitrary names in a directory that has the MultiViews options enabled, could use these flaws to conduct cross-site scripting and HTTP response splitting attacks against users visiting the site.
Bug Fix
- BZ#752618
- Previously, no check was made to see if the /etc/pki/tls/private/localhost.key file was a valid key prior to running the "%post" script for the "mod_ssl" package. Consequently, when /etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.crt did not exist and "localhost.key" was present but invalid, upgrading the Apache HTTP Server daemon (httpd) with mod_ssl failed. The "%post" script has been fixed to test for an existing SSL key. As a result, upgrading httpd with mod_ssl now proceeds as expected.
- BZ#773473
- The "mod_ssl" module did not support operation under FIPS mode. Consequently, when operating Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 with FIPS mode enabled, httpd failed to start. An upstream patch has been applied to disable non-FIPS functionality if operating under FIPS mode and httpd now starts as expected.
- BZ#783242
- Prior to this update, httpd exit status codes were not Linux Standard Base (LSB) compliant. When the command "service httpd reload" was run and httpd failed, the exit status code returned was "0" and not in the range 1 to 6 as expected. A patch has been applied to the init script and httpd now returns "1" as an exit status code.
- BZ#840845
- Chunked Transfer Coding is described in RFC 2616. Previously, the Apache server did not correctly handle a chunked encoded POST request with a "chunk-size" or "chunk-extension" value of 32 bytes or more. Consequently, when such a POST request was made the server did not respond. An upstream patch has been applied and the problem no longer occurs.
- BZ#845532
- Due to a regression, when mod_cache received a non-cacheable 304 response, the headers were served incorrectly. Consequently, compressed data could be returned to the client without the cached headers to indicate the data was compressed. An upstream patch has been applied to merge response and cached headers before data from the cache is served to the client. As a result, cached data is now correctly interpreted by the client.
- BZ#853128
- In a proxy configuration, certain response-line strings were not handled correctly. If a response-line without a "description" string was received from the origin server, for a non-standard status code, such as the "450" status code, a "500 Internal Server Error" would be returned to the client. This bug has been fixed so that the original response line is returned to the client.
Enhancements
- BZ#727342
- The configuration directive "LDAPReferrals" is now supported in addition to the previously introduced "LDAPChaseReferrals".
- BZ#767890
- The AJP support module for "mod_proxy", "mod_proxy_ajp", now supports the "ProxyErrorOverride" directive. Consequently, it is now possible to configure customized error pages for web applications running on a backend server accessed via AJP.
- BZ#833042
- The "%posttrans" scriptlet which automatically restarts the httpd service after a package upgrade can now be disabled. If the file /etc/sysconfig/httpd-disable-posttrans exists, the scriptlet will not restart the daemon.
- BZ#833043
- The output of "httpd -S" now includes configured alias names for each virtual host.
- BZ#840036
- New certificate variable names are now exposed by "mod_ssl" using the "_DN_userID" suffix, such as "SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_userID", which use the commonly used object identifier (OID) definition of "userID", OID 0.9.2342.19200300.100.1.1.
All users of httpd are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which fix these issues and add these enhancements.
Updated httpd packages that fix one bug are now available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.
The httpd packages provide the Apache HTTP Server, a powerful, efficient, and extensible web server.
Bug Fix
- BZ#873678
- Due to a bug in the mod_mem_cache module, an aborted HTTP connection could result in a cached entity becoming corrupt. This update fixes mod_mem_cache to correctly handle aborted connections, thus avoiding cache corruption in this scenario.
All users of httpd are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which fix this bug.