Security private reporting

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(WIP) Security team and private reporting

How to Report a Vulnerability?

Please send a message to security [at] yoctoproject [dot] org, including as many details as possible: the layer or software module affected, the recipe and its version, and any example code, if available.

Branches maintained with security fixes


See Stable release and LTSfor detailed info regarding the policies and maintenance of Stable branch.

The Release page contains a list of all releases of the Yocto Project. Versions in grey are no longer actively maintained with security patches, but well-tested patches may still be accepted for them.

How to Contact the Yocto Project regarding Security

We have set up two security-related mailing lists:

  • Public List
yocto [dash] security [at] yoctoproject[dot] org
This is a public mailing list for anyone to subscribe to. This list is an open list to discuss public security issues/patches and security-related initiatives. For more information, including subscription information, please see the yocto-security mailing list info page.
  • Private List
security [at] yoctoproject [dot] org
This is a private mailing list for reporting non-published potential vulnerabilities. The list is monitored by the Yocto Project Security team.


What you should do if you find a security vulnerability


If you find a security flaw; a crash, an information leakage, or anything that can have a security impact if exploited in any Open Source packages used by the Yocto Project, please report this to the Yocto Project Security Team. If you prefer to contact the upstream project directly, please send a copy to the security team at Yocto as well. If you believe this is highly sensitive information, please report the vulnerability in a secure way, i.e. encrypt the email and send it to the private list. This ensures that the exploit is not leaked and exploited before a response/fix has been generated.


What Yocto Security Team does when it receives a security vulnerability


The YP Security Team team performs a quick analysis and reports the flaw to the upstream project. Normally the upstream project analyzes the problem. If they deem it a real security problem in their software, they develop and release a fix following their own security policy. They may want to include the original reporter in the loop. There is also sometimes some coordination for handling patches, backporting patches etc, or just understanding the problem or what caused it.

The security policy of the upstream project might include a notification to Linux distributions or other important downstream projects in advance to discuss coordinated disclosure. These mailing lists are normally non-public.

When the upstream project releases a version with the fix, they are responsible for contacting Mitre (cve.mitre.org) to get a CVE number assigned and the CVE record published.


If an upstream project does not respond quickly


If an upstream project does not fix the problem in a reasonable time, the Yocto's Security Team will contact other interested parties (usually other distributions) in the community and together try to solve the vulnerability as quickly as possible.

The Yocto Project Security team adheres to the 90 days disclosure policy by default. An increase of the embargo time is possible when necessary.

Security Team Appointment

The Yocto Project Security Team consists of at least three members. When new members are needed, the YP TSC asks for nominations by public channels, including also the limit date. Self-nominations are possible. When the limit time is reached, the YP TSC posts the list of candidates for the comments of project participants and developers. Comments may be sent publicly or privately to the YP and OE TSCs. The candidates are approved by both YP TSC and OE TSC and the final list of the team members is announced publicly.

YP Security Team members may resign at any time.

Security Team Operations

The work of the Security Team might require high confidentiality. Team members are individuals selected by merit and do not represent the companies they work for. They do not share information about confidential issues outside of the team and do not hint about ongoing embargoes.

Team members can bring in domain experts as needed. Those people should be added to individual issues only and adhere to the same standards as the YP Security Team.

The YP security team organizes its meetings and communication as needed.

When the YP Security team receives a report about a potential security vulnerability, they quickly analyze and notify the reporter of the result. They might also request more information.

If the issue is confirmed and affects the code maintained by the YP, they confidentially notify maintainers of that code and work with them to prepare a fix.

If the issue is confirmed and affects an upstream project, the YP security team notifies the project. Usually, the upstream project analyzes the problem again. If they deem it a real security problem in their software, they develop and release a fix following their security policy. They may want to include the original reporter in the loop. There is also sometimes some coordination for handling patches, backporting patches etc, or just understanding the problem or what caused it.

The security policy of the upstream project might include a notification to Linux distributions or other important downstream projects in advance to discuss coordinated disclosure. These mailing lists are generally non-public. The YP Security Team participates in the discussion as needed. They might also include the YP maintainer of the affected package.

When the upstream project releases a version with the fix, they are responsible for contacting Mitre (cve.mitre.org) to get a CVE number assigned and the CVE record published.

When the fix is publicly available, the YP security team member or the package maintainer sends patches against the YP code base, following usual procedures, including public code review.

Current Security Team Members

For secure communications, please send your messages encrypted using the GPG keys. Remember message headers are not encrypted so do not include sensitive information in the subject line.

  • Richard Purdie <richard.purdie@linuxfoundation.org>
Public key
  • Michael Halstead <mhalstead [at] linuxfoundation [dot] org>
Public keys: Michael Halstead or Michael Halstead
  • Ross Burton <ross@burtonini.com>
Public key
  • Marta Rybczynska <marta DOT rybczynska [at] syslinbit [dot] com>
Public key