Argo CD is a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes. It has been discovered that an unprivileged pod in a different namespace on the same cluster could connect to the Redis server on port 6379. Despite having installed the latest version of the VPC CNI plugin on the EKS cluster, it requires manual enablement through configuration to enforce network policies. This raises concerns that many clients might unknowingly have open access to their Redis servers. This vulnerability could lead to Privilege Escalation to the level of cluster controller, or to information leakage, affecting anyone who does not have strict access controls on their Redis instance. This issue has been patched in version(s) 2.8.19, 2.9.15 and 2.10.10.
The product uses a broken or risky cryptographic algorithm or protocol.
Name | Vendor | Start Version | End Version |
---|---|---|---|
Argo_cd | Argoproj | * | 2.8.19 (excluding) |
Argo_cd | Argoproj | 2.9.0 (including) | 2.9.15 (excluding) |
Argo_cd | Argoproj | 2.10.0 (including) | 2.10.10 (excluding) |
Argo_cd | Argoproj | 2.11.0 (including) | 2.11.1 (excluding) |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.10 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/argocd-rhel8:v1.10.6-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.10 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/argo-rollouts-rhel8:v1.10.6-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.10 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/console-plugin-rhel8:v1.10.6-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.10 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/dex-rhel8:v1.10.6-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.10 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/gitops-operator-bundle:v1.10.6-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.10 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/gitops-rhel8:v1.10.6-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.10 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/gitops-rhel8-operator:v1.10.6-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.10 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/kam-delivery-rhel8:v1.10.6-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.10 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/must-gather-rhel8:v1.10.6-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.11 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/argocd-rhel8:v1.11.5-3 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.11 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/argo-rollouts-rhel8:v1.11.5-3 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.11 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/console-plugin-rhel8:v1.11.5-3 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.11 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/dex-rhel8:v1.11.5-3 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.11 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/gitops-operator-bundle:v1.11.5-3 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.11 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/gitops-rhel8:v1.11.5-3 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.11 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/gitops-rhel8-operator:v1.11.5-3 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.11 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/kam-delivery-rhel8:v1.11.5-3 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.11 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/must-gather-rhel8:v1.11.5-3 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.12 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/argocd-rhel8:v1.12.3-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.12 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/argo-rollouts-rhel8:v1.12.3-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.12 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/console-plugin-rhel8:v1.12.3-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.12 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/dex-rhel8:v1.12.3-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.12 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/gitops-operator-bundle:v1.12.3-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.12 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/gitops-rhel8:v1.12.3-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.12 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/gitops-rhel8-operator:v1.12.3-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.12 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/kam-delivery-rhel8:v1.12.3-4 | * |
Red Hat OpenShift GitOps 1.12 | RedHat | openshift-gitops-1/must-gather-rhel8:v1.12.3-4 | * |
Cryptographic algorithms are the methods by which data is scrambled to prevent observation or influence by unauthorized actors. Insecure cryptography can be exploited to expose sensitive information, modify data in unexpected ways, spoof identities of other users or devices, or other impacts. It is very difficult to produce a secure algorithm, and even high-profile algorithms by accomplished cryptographic experts have been broken. Well-known techniques exist to break or weaken various kinds of cryptography. Accordingly, there are a small number of well-understood and heavily studied algorithms that should be used by most products. Using a non-standard or known-insecure algorithm is dangerous because a determined adversary may be able to break the algorithm and compromise whatever data has been protected. Since the state of cryptography advances so rapidly, it is common for an algorithm to be considered “unsafe” even if it was once thought to be strong. This can happen when new attacks are discovered, or if computing power increases so much that the cryptographic algorithm no longer provides the amount of protection that was originally thought. For a number of reasons, this weakness is even more challenging to manage with hardware deployment of cryptographic algorithms as opposed to software implementation. First, if a flaw is discovered with hardware-implemented cryptography, the flaw cannot be fixed in most cases without a recall of the product, because hardware is not easily replaceable like software. Second, because the hardware product is expected to work for years, the adversary’s computing power will only increase over time.