Upgrade your local installation of Git, especially if you are using Git for Windows, or you use Git on a multi-user machine.
Today, the Git project released new versions which address a pair of security vulnerabilities.
GitHub is unaffected by these vulnerabilities1. However, you should be aware of them and upgrade your local installation of Git, especially if you are using Git for Windows, or you use Git on a multi-user machine.
CVE-2022-24765
This vulnerability affects users working on multi-user machines where a malicious actor could create a .git directory in a shared location above a victim’s current working directory. On Windows, for example, an attacker could create C:\.git\config, which would cause all git invocations that occur outside of a repository to read its configured values.
Since some configuration variables (such as core.fsmonitor) cause Git to execute arbitrary commands, this can lead to arbitrary command execution when working on a shared machine.
The most effective way to protect against this vulnerability is to upgrade to Git v2.35.2. This version changes Git’s behavior when looking for a top-level .git directory to stop when its directory traversal changes ownership from the current user. (If you wish to make an exception to this behavior, you can use the new multi-valued safe.directory configuration).
If you can’t upgrade immediately, the most effective ways to reduce your risk are the following:
Define the GIT_CEILING_DIRECTORIES environment variable to contain the parent directory of your user profile (i.e., /Users on macOS, /home on Linux, and C:\Users on Windows).
Avoid running Git on multi-user machines when your current working directory is not within a trusted repository.
Note that many tools (such as the Git for Windows installation of Git Bash, posh-git, and Visual Studio) run Git commands under the hood. If you are on a multi-user machine, avoid using these tools until you have upgraded to the latest release.
Credit for finding this vulnerability goes to 俞晨东.
[source]
CVE-2022-24767
This vulnerability affects the Git for Windows uninstaller, which runs in the user’s temporary directory. Because the SYSTEM user account inherits the default permissions of C:\Windows\Temp (which is world-writable), any authenticated user can place malicious .dll files which are loaded when running the Git for Windows uninstaller when run via the SYSTEM account.
The most effective way to protect against this vulnerability is to upgrade to Git for Windows v2.35.2. If you can’t upgrade immediately, reduce your risk with the following:
Avoid running the uninstaller until after upgrading
Override the SYSTEM user’s TMP environment variable to a directory which can only be written to by the SYSTEM user
Remove unknown .dll files from C:\Windows\Temp before running the uninstaller
Run the uninstaller under an administrator account rather than as the SYSTEM user
Credit for finding this vulnerability goes to the Lockheed Martin Red Team.
[source]
GitHub does not run git outside of known repositories, so is not susceptible to the attack described by CVE-2022-24765. Likewise, GitHub does not use Git for Windows, and so is unaffected by CVE-2022-24767 entirely.
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