π ~4 min read β’ Source: Amazon Linux advisory ALAS2-2023-2004
Related CVEs: CVE-2023-26604 CVE-2019-3842 CVE-2020-13529 CVE-2020-13776 CVE-2022-2526 CVE-2019-6454 CVE-2018-15688 CVE-2018-16864 +9 more
Upstream summary: systemd before 247 does not adequately block local privilege escalation for some Sudo configurations, e.g., plausible sudoers files in which the "systemctl status" command may be executed. Specifically, systemd does not set LESSSECURE to 1, and thus other programs may be launched from the less program. This presents a substantial security risk when running systemctl from Sudo, because less executes as root when the terminal size is too small to show the complete systemctl out
Table of contents
Symptom & Impact
On Amazon Linux 2 hosts that have systemd installed, operators report behaviour consistent with Amazon Linux advisory ALAS2-2023-2004: yum refuses to install or restart affected services, SELinux AVC denials appear in /var/log/audit/audit.log, and β for security-rated advisories β the host is exposed to the vulnerability set above. Impact ranges from a single service-restart loop on a single EC2 instance to wider availability incidents whenever systemd sits on the serving path of an Auto Scaling group or ECS task.
Environment & Reproduction
Reproduction targets Amazon Linux 2. Confirm release and the installed package:
cat /etc/system-release
cat /etc/os-release
rpm -q systemd
yum info systemd | head -20
Trigger the workflow that exposes systemd β multiple vulnerabilities (17 CVEs) β patch and remediation guide while collecting:
sudo journalctl -u systemd -b --no-pager | tail -200
sudo journalctl -xe --no-pager | tail -200
sudo tail -200 /var/log/yum.log
sudo tail -200 /var/log/audit/audit.log
# For an evidence bundle bundle with sosreport (Amazon Linux ships it):
sudo sosreport --batch
For fleet-wide visibility, query Amazon Inspector and SSM at the same time:
aws inspector2 list-findings
--filter-criteria 'awsAccountId={comparison=EQUALS,value=<account-id>}'
--max-results 50
aws ssm describe-instance-patches --instance-id <i-xxxx> | head -40
Root Cause Analysis
Root cause is documented in Amazon Linux advisory ALAS2-2023-2004. The Amazon Linux Security Team shipped fixes in the corresponding systemd update for Amazon Linux 2; running an outdated AMI or unpatched instance leaves the host exposed to the failure modes described in the advisory. Correlate yum history with system logs:
sudo yum history | head
sudo yum history list systemd
sudo yum history info <id>
sudo ausearch -m AVC,USER_AVC -ts today | tail -100
cat /proc/sys/kernel/tainted # non-zero = tainted kernel / out-of-tree modules
Quick Triage
Run these on Amazon Linux 2 to capture the current state of systemd:
rpm -q systemd # installed NVR
rpm -V systemd # verify shipped files
sudo yum check-update --security
sudo yum updateinfo list cves
systemctl --failed --no-pager
sudo firewall-cmd --list-all 2>/dev/null || sudo iptables -L -n
getenforce && sestatus
# If systemd ships a systemd unit (unit name may differ from pkg name, e.g.
# bindβnamed, postgresql-serverβpostgresql, php-fpmβphp-fpm):
systemctl list-unit-files | grep -i systemd | head
Step-by-Step Diagnosis
-
List failed systemd units.
systemctl --failed --no-pager -
Tail the journal for
systemdand the system bus.sudo journalctl -u systemd -f --no-pager sudo journalctl -xe -f --no-pager -
Inspect firewall / security-group posture from inside the instance.
sudo firewall-cmd --list-all-zones --permanent 2>/dev/null || true sudo nft list ruleset 2>/dev/null | head -50 ss -tulpen | head -
Surface SELinux denials and author a local policy module if needed.
sudo ausearch -m AVC,USER_AVC -ts today sudo ausearch -m AVC -ts today | audit2allow -a -M /tmp/local-fix sudo semodule -i /tmp/local-fix.pp -
Verify
systemdintegrity and reinstall if anything is altered.sudo rpm -V systemd sudo yum reinstall -y systemd -
Correlate findings with
/var/log/yum.log,yum history, Amazon Inspector findings, and Amazon Linux advisory ALAS2-2023-2004 to pin the change that introduced systemd β multiple vulnerabilities (17 CVEs) β patch and remediation guide.
Solution – Primary Fix
Apply the corrective yum transaction referenced by Amazon Linux advisory ALAS2-2023-2004, then reload affected systemd units:
sudo yum -y makecache
sudo yum -y update --security # apply ALL security errata (recommended)
# Or target a single package:
sudo yum -y update systemd
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
# Unit name may differ from pkg name; check first:
systemctl list-unit-files | grep -i systemd | head
sudo systemctl restart systemd
rpm -q systemd # confirm new NVR
systemctl is-active systemd 2>/dev/null # confirm running (if a unit exists)
For kernel / glibc / systemd / openssl advisories a reboot is required (or Live Patching where available):
sudo needs-restarting -r # report whether reboot needed
sudo systemctl reboot # or: sudo shutdown -r now
# Amazon Linux Live Patching for the kernel (when enabled on the instance):
sudo yum install -y kernel-livepatch
sudo yum kernel-livepatch enable # AL2 / AL2023
sudo yum kernel-livepatch status
Roll the same change across an Auto Scaling group / fleet with AWS Systems Manager Patch Manager:
aws ssm send-command
--document-name AWS-RunPatchBaseline
--targets Key=tag:Patch,Values=yes
--parameters 'Operation=Install,RebootOption=RebootIfNeeded'
--comment 'Apply Amazon Linux security errata'
aws ssm list-command-invocations --details --max-results 5
# Confirm the patch landed across the fleet:
aws ssm describe-instance-patch-states-for-patch-group
--patch-group <patch-group>
For immutable infrastructure, rebuild the golden AMI in EC2 Image Builder so newly launched instances start patched (do not rely on in-place patching alone):
aws imagebuilder start-image-pipeline-execution
--image-pipeline-arn arn:aws:imagebuilder:<region>:<acct>:image-pipeline/<name>
aws imagebuilder list-images --owner Self --max-results 5
# Then update the launch template / ASG to the new AMI:
aws ec2 create-launch-template-version --launch-template-id <lt-id>
--source-version '$Latest' --launch-template-data 'ImageId=<new-ami-id>'
Need help rolling this patch across an Amazon Linux fleet? Our IT Solutions & Services team manages Amazon Linux fleets with AWS Systems Manager Patch Manager + Inspector + Image Builder pipelines. Get in touch for a free consultation.
Solution – Alternative Approaches
If the primary patch is not viable, choose from these:
-
Roll back the offending yum transaction:
sudo yum history list | head sudo yum history info <id> sudo yum history undo <id> -
Version-lock the package so yum cannot upgrade it:
sudo yum install -y yum-plugin-versionlock sudo yum versionlock add systemd sudo yum versionlock list sudo yum versionlock delete systemd # remove the lock -
Install an older NVR if a regression is suspected:
yum --showduplicates list systemd | tac | head sudo yum install -y --allowerasing systemd-<older-NVR> -
Switch SELinux to permissive briefly to confirm policy is the cause, then re-enforce:
sudo setenforce 0 # reproduce, capture denials, author a custom module: sudo ausearch -m AVC -ts recent | audit2allow -a -M mylocal sudo semodule -i mylocal.pp sudo setenforce 1 -
Take an EBS snapshot of the root volume before kernel / glibc upgrades for fast rollback:
INSTANCE_ID=$(curl -s http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/instance-id) VOL_ID=$(aws ec2 describe-instances --instance-ids $INSTANCE_ID --query 'Reservations[].Instances[].BlockDeviceMappings[?DeviceName==`/dev/xvda`].Ebs.VolumeId' --output text) aws ec2 create-snapshot --volume-id $VOL_ID --description 'pre-patch-snapshot' --tag-specifications 'ResourceType=snapshot,Tags=[{Key=Name,Value=pre-patch}]' -
For immutable workloads, swap the ASG to a previous AMI version instead of patching in place:
aws ec2 describe-launch-template-versions --launch-template-id <lt-id> --max-results 5 aws autoscaling update-auto-scaling-group --auto-scaling-group-name <asg> --launch-template LaunchTemplateId=<lt-id>,Version='<prev-version>' aws autoscaling start-instance-refresh --auto-scaling-group-name <asg> -
Where Kernel Live Patching is enabled, apply kernel fixes without reboot:
sudo yum kernel-livepatch status sudo yum kernel-livepatch enable sudo yum update -y --advisory=ALAS2-2023-2004 kernel
Verification & Acceptance Criteria
All of these should pass after the fix:
rpm -q systemd # expected fixed NVR
sudo yum updateinfo list cves --installed # CVEs above no longer listed
systemctl is-active systemd 2>/dev/null
sudo journalctl -u systemd --since "5 minutes ago" --no-pager | grep -iE "error|fail" || echo OK
sudo firewall-cmd --list-services 2>/dev/null || sudo iptables -L -n
getenforce
sudo needs-restarting -r
# Inspector should drop the finding within ~24h:
aws inspector2 list-findings
--filter-criteria 'vulnerabilityId={comparison=EQUALS,value=CVE-2023-26604}'
The original reproduction for systemd β multiple vulnerabilities (17 CVEs) β patch and remediation guide must not trigger across two consecutive runs.
Rollback Plan
Capture state before any change:
rpm -qa > /root/rpm-pre.txt
sudo yum history list > /root/yum-history-pre.txt
# Optional pre-patch EBS snapshot of the root volume (run from inside the instance):
INSTANCE_ID=$(curl -s http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/instance-id)
aws ec2 create-snapshot --volume-id <vol-id> --description 'pre-patch'
To revert if the patch is bad:
sudo yum history undo <id>
# Or downgrade just the package:
sudo yum install -y --allowerasing systemd-<older-NVR>
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl restart systemd
# Or replace the instance from a snapshot/older AMI via ASG instance refresh:
aws autoscaling start-instance-refresh --auto-scaling-group-name <asg>
# Custom SELinux policy cleanup:
sudo semodule -r mylocal
Prevention & Hardening
Reduce the chance of this recurring on Amazon Linux 2:
-
Enable automatic security patching on each instance:
sudo yum install -y yum-cron sudo sed -i 's/^update_cmd.*/update_cmd = security/' /etc/yum-cron/yum-cron.conf 2>/dev/null || true sudo sed -i 's/^upgrade_type.*/upgrade_type = security/' /etc/dnf/automatic.conf 2>/dev/null || true sudo sed -i 's/^apply_updates.*/apply_updates = yes/' /etc/dnf/automatic.conf 2>/dev/null || true sudo systemctl enable --now yum-cron.service -
Drive fleet-wide patching through AWS Systems Manager Patch Manager (preferred for any fleet bigger than a handful of instances):
aws ssm send-command --document-name AWS-RunPatchBaseline --targets Key=tag:Patch,Values=yes --parameters 'Operation=Install,RebootOption=RebootIfNeeded' aws ssm describe-patch-baselines --filters Key=OWNER,Values=AWS aws ssm get-default-patch-baseline --operating-system AMAZON_LINUX_2 -
Enable Amazon Inspector for continuous CVE / package vulnerability scanning:
aws inspector2 enable --resource-types EC2 ECR LAMBDA aws inspector2 list-findings --filter-criteria 'severity={comparison=EQUALS,value=HIGH}' --max-results 20 aws inspector2 batch-get-account-status -
Bake patched golden AMIs with EC2 Image Builder and roll them via ASG instance refresh instead of in-place patching for immutable infrastructure:
aws imagebuilder list-image-pipelines aws imagebuilder start-image-pipeline-execution --image-pipeline-arn arn:aws:imagebuilder:<region>:<acct>:image-pipeline/<name> aws autoscaling start-instance-refresh --auto-scaling-group-name <asg> -
Subscribe to alas.aws.amazon.com and watch AWS security bulletins for upstream changes.
-
Version-lock sensitive packages so they cannot be auto-upgraded:
sudo yum install -y yum-plugin-versionlock sudo yum versionlock add systemd -
Monitor file integrity with AIDE:
sudo yum install -y aide sudo aide --init && sudo mv /var/lib/aide/aide.db.new.gz /var/lib/aide/aide.db.gz sudo aide --check -
Enable Kernel Live Patching so kernel CVEs can be remediated without reboot:
sudo yum install -y kernel-livepatch sudo yum kernel-livepatch enable sudo yum kernel-livepatch status -
Keep SELinux in enforcing mode and review custom modules in
/etc/selinux/targeted/after every package upgrade. -
Apply CIS Amazon Linux 2 Benchmark hardening and remove unused packages.
Related Errors & Cross-Refs
Issues that commonly surface alongside systemd β multiple vulnerabilities (17 CVEs) β patch and remediation guide: yum lock contention, systemd unit ordering cycles, SELinux AVC bursts, security-group / NACL drift, and kernel taint flags after out-of-tree modules. Useful triage:
sudo yum check
systemd-analyze critical-chain
sudo ausearch -m AVC -ts today | tail
sudo firewall-cmd --get-active-zones 2>/dev/null || sudo iptables -L -n
cat /proc/sys/kernel/tainted
sudo needs-restarting -r
aws ssm describe-instance-patches --instance-id <i-xxxx> | tail -40
View all amazon-linux-2 tutorials on the Tutorials Hub →
Browse all common problems & solutions on the Tutorials Hub.
References & Further Reading
Primary reference: Amazon Linux advisory ALAS2-2023-2004. Manual pages useful on Amazon Linux 2:
man yum
man yum.conf
man systemctl
man journalctl
man firewall-cmd
man semanage
man audit2allow
man sosreport
Other resources: alas.aws.amazon.com, SSM Patch Manager docs, Amazon Inspector docs, EC2 Image Builder docs, and per-package notes in /usr/share/doc/systemd/ for components implicated in systemd β multiple vulnerabilities (17 CVEs) β patch and remediation guide.