This advisory announces multiple security vulnerabilities that were found in Jenkins core.
In some places, Jenkins XML API uses XStream to deserialize arbitrary content, which is affected by CVE-2013-7285 reported against XStream. This allows malicious users of Jenkins with a limited set of permissions to execute arbitrary code inside the Jenkins controller.
Restrictions of HTML tags for user-editable contents are too lax. This allows malicious users of Jenkins to trick other unsuspecting users into providing sensitive information.
Plugging a hole in the earlier fix to SECURITY-55. Under some circimstances, a malicious user of Jenkins can configure job X to trigger another job Y that the user has no access to.
CLI job creation had a directory traversal vulnerability. This allows a malicious user of Jenkins with a limited set of permissions to overwrite files in the Jenkins controller and escalate privileges.
The password input control in the password parameter definition in the Jenkins UI was serving the actual value of the password in HTML, not an encrypted one. If a sensitive value is set as the default value of such a parameter definition, it can be exposed to unintended audience.
Deleting the user was not invalidating the API token, allowing users to access Jenkins when they shouldn’t be allowed to do so.
"Jenkins' own user database" was revealing the presence/absence of users when login attempts fail.
Jenkins had a cross-site scripting vulnerability in one of its cookies. If Jenkins is deployed in an environment that allows an attacker to override Jenkins cookies in victim’s browser, this vulnerability can be exploited.
Jenkins was vulnerable to session fixation attack. If Jenkins is deployed in an environment that allows an attacker to override Jenkins cookies in victim’s browser, this vulnerability can be exploited.
SECURITY-106, and SECURITY-80 are rated high. An attacker only needs direct HTTP access to the server to mount this attack.
SECURITY-105, SECURITY-109, SECURITY-108, and SECURITY-74 are rated high. These vulnerabilities allow attackes with valid Jenkins user accounts to escalate privileges in various ways.
SECURITY-76, SECURIT-88, and SECURITY-89 are rated medium. These vulnerabilities requires an attacker to be an user of Jenkins, and the mode of the attack is limited.
SECURITY-93, and SECURITY-79 are rated low. These vulnerabilities only affect a small part of Jenkins and has limited impact.
SECURITY-77, SECURITY-75, and SECURITY-73 are rated low. These vulnerabilities are hard to exploit unless combined with other exploit in the network.