I just tried some older virtual routers, and they are:

root@r-163-VM:~# env x='() { :;}; echo OOPS' bash -c /usr/bin/true
OOPS
bash: /usr/bin/true: No such file or directory

That said, you can only ssh to them from the local hypervisor. Not sure if 
there’s any exposure on the http side.

Running apt-get update && apt-get install bash patches the bash vuln.

I’ll put together a formal statement.

On Sep 26, 2014, at 6:55 AM, Ian Duffy 
<i...@ianduffy.ie<mailto:i...@ianduffy.ie>> wrote:

Tried this against the latest system vms built on Jenkins.

Didn't get a successful exploited response. Tested against http://systemvm
- public-ip/cgi-bin/ipcalc
On 25 Sep 2014 16:56, "Abhinandan Prateek" 
<agneya2...@gmail.com<mailto:agneya2...@gmail.com>> wrote:


After heart bleed we are Shell shocked
http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-29361794 !
It may not affect cloudstack directly as it is a vulnerability that
affects bash, and allows the attacker to take control of the system running
bash shell.

-abhi

Stratosec - Secure Finance and Heathcare Clouds
http://stratosec.co
o: 415.315.9385
@johnlkinsella<http://twitter.com/johnlkinsella>

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