📖 ~4 min read • Source: Debian Security Tracker
Related CVEs: CVE-2022-31081
Upstream summary: HTTP::Daemon is a simple http server class written in perl. Versions prior to 6.15 are subject to a vulnerability which could potentially be exploited to gain privileged access to APIs or poison intermediate caches. It is uncertain how large the risks are, most Perl based applications are served on top of Nginx or Apache, not on the `HTTP::Daemon`. This library is commonly used for local development and tests. Users are advised to update to resolve this issue. Users unable to
Table of contents
Symptom & Impact
On Debian 13 hosts running libhttp-daemon-perl, administrators observe behaviour consistent with the Debian Security Tracker entry: apt refusing to install or restart affected services, and — for security-rated advisories — exposure to the vulnerability set above. Impact ranges from a single service restart to wider availability incidents whenever libhttp-daemon-perl sits on the serving path.
Environment & Reproduction
Reproduction targets Debian 13. Confirm release with cat /etc/debian_version and lsb_release -a, and the currently installed package with dpkg -l libhttp-daemon-perl and apt-cache policy libhttp-daemon-perl. Capture system state with sudo reportbug libhttp-daemon-perl if you need to file upstream. Trigger the workflow that exposes libhttp-daemon-perl — vulnerability — patch and remediation guide while collecting journalctl -b, /var/log/apt/history.log, and dpkg -l output.
Root Cause Analysis
Root cause is tracked at Debian Security Tracker. The Debian Security Team shipped fixes in the corresponding libhttp-daemon-perl point release for Debian 13; running an outdated build leaves the host exposed to the failure modes referenced above. Correlate journalctl --since with apt history (/var/log/apt/history.log) and any kernel taint flags in /proc/sys/kernel/tainted to isolate the originating change.
Quick Triage
Quick triage: systemctl status libhttp-daemon-perl, journalctl -u libhttp-daemon-perl -n 200, sudo apt update && apt list --upgradable, sudo nft list ruleset (or sudo iptables -L), and sudo dpkg --audit. For kernel issues review journalctl -k --since "1 hour ago".
Step-by-Step Diagnosis
1) systemctl --failed. 2) journalctl -xe and journalctl -u libhttp-daemon-perl. 3) Validate firewall: sudo nft list ruleset or sudo iptables -L -n -v. 4) dpkg -V libhttp-daemon-perl for integrity. 5) sudo apt install --reinstall libhttp-daemon-perl if files were tampered. 6) Correlate findings with /var/log/apt/history.log, /var/log/dpkg.log, and Debian Security Tracker to pin the change that introduced libhttp-daemon-perl — vulnerability — patch and remediation guide.
Solution – Primary Fix
Primary fix: apply the corrective apt transaction documented in Debian Security Tracker, then reload the affected systemd unit. Typical commands: sudo apt update, sudo apt -y install --only-upgrade libhttp-daemon-perl (or sudo unattended-upgrade -v), sudo systemctl daemon-reload, sudo systemctl restart libhttp-daemon-perl, then dpkg -l libhttp-daemon-perl to validate the new build is installed. For kernel advisories add sudo reboot.
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Solution – Alternative Approaches
Alternatives include pinning a known-good version via /etc/apt/preferences.d/libhttp-daemon-perl.pref, holding the package with sudo apt-mark hold libhttp-daemon-perl, rolling back with sudo apt install libhttp-daemon-perl=<old-version>, switching firewall backends between iptables-legacy and nftables via update-alternatives --config iptables, or applying the patch from the security archive only — deb debian-13-security main contrib non-free — while delaying the full point-release upgrade.
Verification & Acceptance Criteria
Acceptance: dpkg -l libhttp-daemon-perl shows the expected fixed version, systemctl is-active libhttp-daemon-perl is active, journalctl -u libhttp-daemon-perl --since "5 minutes ago" shows no errors, apt list --upgradable no longer lists the advisory, sudo nft list ruleset matches the intended policy, and the original reproduction steps for libhttp-daemon-perl — vulnerability — patch and remediation guide no longer trigger the failure across two consecutive runs.
Rollback Plan
Capture state with apt list --installed > /root/apt-pre.txt and dpkg --get-selections > /root/dpkg-pre.txt. To revert, run sudo apt install --allow-downgrades libhttp-daemon-perl=<old-version> and reload systemctl daemon-reload. Reboot if the kernel or initramfs changed and re-verify symptoms. Where LVM snapshots are in use, sudo lvconvert --merge /dev/<vg>/preupgrade is the fastest rollback path.
Prevention & Hardening
Prevent recurrence by enabling unattended-upgrades with Unattended-Upgrade::Origins-Pattern tuned to origin=Debian,codename=${distro_codename},label=Debian-Security, subscribing to debian-security-announce, mirroring through a local apt-mirror or aptly repo for controlled rollouts, version-locking sensitive packages, and monitoring file integrity with debsums -c or aide --check. Apply CIS Debian hardening and keep needrestart installed so service restarts happen automatically after library upgrades.
Related Errors & Cross-Refs
Related issues that commonly surface alongside libhttp-daemon-perl — vulnerability — patch and remediation guide: apt lock contention (dpkg --configure -a), systemd unit ordering cycles, firewall rule drift, and kernel taint flags in cat /proc/sys/kernel/tainted. See sibling common-problem articles in this Debian 13 series for adjacent failure modes.
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References & Further Reading
Primary reference: Debian Security Tracker. Supporting docs: Debian Administrators Handbook, man apt, man systemctl, man nft, man iptables, man journalctl, man debsums, the Debian Security Tracker at security-tracker.debian.org, and Debian Security FAQ at debian.org/security/faq. Review /usr/share/doc/libhttp-daemon-perl/ for component-level notes implicated in libhttp-daemon-perl — vulnerability — patch and remediation guide.