some security notes for them.
* The [[plugins/img]] plugin assumes that imagemagick/perlmagick are secure
- from malformed image attacks. Imagemagick has had security holes in the
+ from malformed image attacks for at least the formats listed in
+ `img_allowed_formats`. Imagemagick has had security holes in the
past. To be able to exploit such a hole, a user would need to be able to
upload images to the wiki.
to Debian jessie as version 3.20141016.2 and to Debian wheezy as version
3.20120629.2. An upgrade is recommended for sites using CGI and openid.
-<a href="http://onet.pl">onet</a>
+## XSS via error messages
+
+CGI error messages did not escape HTML meta-characters, potentially
+allowing an attacker to carry out cross-site scripting by directing a
+user to a URL that would result in a crafted ikiwiki error message. This
+was discovered on 4 May by the ikiwiki developers, and the fixed version
+3.20160506 was released on 6 May. The same fixes were backported to Debian
+8 "jessie" in version 3.20141016.3. A backport to Debian 7 "wheezy" is
+in progress.
+
+An upgrade is recommended for sites using
+the CGI. ([[!cve CVE-2016-4561]], OVE-20160505-0012)
+
+## ImageMagick CVE-2016–3714 ("ImageTragick")
+
+ikiwiki 3.20160506 and 3.20141016.3 attempt to mitigate
+[[!cve CVE-2016-3714]], and any
+future ImageMagick vulnerabilities that resemble it, by restricting the
+image formats that the [[ikiwiki/directive/img]] directive is willing to
+resize. An upgrade is recommended for sites where an untrusted user is
+able to attach images. Upgrading ImageMagick to a version where
+CVE-2016-3714 has been fixed is also recommended, but at the time of
+writing no such version is available.
+
+## Perl CVE-2016-1238 (current working directory in search path)
+
+ikiwiki 3.20160728 attempts to mitigate [[!cve CVE-2016-1238]] by
+removing `'.'` from the Perl library search path. An attacker with write
+access to ikiwiki's current working directory could potentially use this
+vulnerability to execute arbitrary Perl code. An upgrade is recommended
+for sites where an untrusted user is able to attach files with arbitrary
+names and/or run a setuid ikiwiki wrapper with a working directory of
+their choice.