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Over 660k Rsync servers exposed to code execution attacks

was surprised seeing this not discussed previously, as it can have rather big ramifications also for home server holsters etc (if not behind VPN)

17 hours agonimar

There's something I am missing here. I sync my servers with rsync, but it is over ssh - is this still vulnerable?

15 hours agomartinbaun

If you explicitly use "-e ssh" and don't run a daemon, then these probably don't affect you.

If you don't specify that protocol, though, you have three scenarios:

1. only the local host has the rsync binary 2. both local and remote hosts have the binary, but neither runs them as a daemon 3. both have the binary and the remote runs as the daemon

In #1 you end up using SSH anyway (unless there's also no SSH binary). In #2, a malicious server binary could attack you. In #3, a malicious server binary could attack you.

Also, many of rsync's features rely upon both sides having the binary.

14 hours agoaesh2Xa1

Wow, thank you - this is exactly what I didn't get. You explained it super well.

I am number 2, and so I guess it wont affect me as long as the fingerprint doesn't change to a malicious server that have taken over an IP.