I guess we should also try to turn the appropriate fake-mail-server
scripts into exim test scripts.
I'd like to see which test shows the vulnerability and your results.
Jeremy, Heiko, is it OK to be discussing this here ?
On Wed, 5 Jan 2022, Harry Mills via Exim-dev wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
>
> You are correct. I have setup a test network with the fake-mail-server
> running in a VM and I am liaising with the SecVuln guys at the moment to see
> if I can reproduce the test they say shows the vulnerability when Exim is
> sending email.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Harry
>
> On 04/01/2022 19:33, Andrew C Aitchison wrote:
>> On Tue, 4 Jan 2022, Harry Mills via Exim-dev wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Jeremy,
>>>
>>> Thanks for the swift reply. Here is the (anonymised) output of the test
>>> tool for reference. It looks like exim 4.94.2 (Centos 8) is not
>>> vulnerable:
>>>
>>> python3 ./command-injection-tester --smtp <MAILSERVER>
>>
>> As I understand https://nostarttls.secvuln.info/
>> command-injection-tester only tests for bugs when exim is receiving email;
>> to test for the *response* injection bugs in CVE-2021-38371, when exim is
>> sending email, you need to use
>> https://github.com/Email-Analysis-Toolkit/fake-mail-server
>> which looks more involved to me.
>>
> --
> Harry Mills Tel: 01749 812100
> Managing Director Mob: 07815 848818
> Opendium Ltd. www.opendium.com
>
>
> --
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--
Andrew C. Aitchison Kendal, UK
andrew@???