Windows Media Services Unicast Service May Become Unresponsive (273014)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft Windows Media Services 4.0
- Microsoft Windows Media Services 4.1
This article was previously published under Q273014 SYMPTOMS
Microsoft has made an update available for the Unicast Service race condition issue. The Microsoft Windows Media Services Unicast Service may become unresponsive and no longer serve content. This vulnerability may allow a malicious user to prevent an affected server from providing useful services.
CAUSE
If a client sends a particular type of malformed request to a Windows Media
server, it can induce a race condition. When the server has been put into such a state, subsequent requests, even ones that are usually legitimate can cause the Windows Media Unicast Service to fail. If this happens, any ongoing sessions are lost, and the server stops providing Unicast streaming media services.
You can put an affected server back into service by restarting the Unicast Service. The vulnerability does not cause any data loss, and does not allow the malicious user to usurp any administrative privileges on the computer.
RESOLUTION
Microsoft has released a patch that eliminates this security vulnerability in Microsoft Windows Media Services.
Frequently asked questions regarding this vulnerability and the patch can be found at the following location:
The following file is available for Microsoft Windows NT Server 4.0 and Microsoft Windows 2000 from the Microsoft Download Center:
The English version of this fix should have the following file attributes or later: |
08/23/2000 | 12:47:47 PM | 4.1.0.3920 | 441,312 | Nsum.exe | x86 Windows 2000 | 08/22/2000 | 11:01:12 AM | 4.1.0.3858 | 440,288 | NSum.exe | x86 Windows NT |
STATUS
Microsoft has confirmed this to be a problem in the Microsoft products listed at the beginning of this article.
Modification Type: | Minor | Last Reviewed: | 8/5/2004 |
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Keywords: | kbgraphxlinkcritical kbprb KB273014 |
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