Nasty PHP7 remote code execution bug exploited in the wild (Nextcloud specifically called out)
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 Dam but it only affects NGINX with PHP-FPM I thought FPM should be more secure cause it allows PHP to run standalone, but at the same time I dont know why it is PHP vulnerability since it only affects Nginx with FPM and not Apache with FPM, if i was fair man i would put the blame 50/50 
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 @Emad-R said in Nasty PHP7 remote code execution bug exploited in the wild (Nextcloud specifically called out): Dam but it only affects NGINX with PHP-FPM I thought FPM should be more secure cause it allows PHP to run standalone, but at the same time I dont know why it is PHP vulnerability since it only affects Nginx, if i was fair man i would put the blame 50/50 Who manages php-fpm? Because if it’s PHP then they should get all or at least more than 50% of the blame. 
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 This is specifically calling out Nextcloud setup with Nginx as the webserver? 
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 @Emad-R said in Nasty PHP7 remote code execution bug exploited in the wild (Nextcloud specifically called out): I thought FPM should be more secure cause it allows PHP to run standalone Just because a model is more secure, doesn't mean that a bug won't expose it. 
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 @JaredBusch said in Nasty PHP7 remote code execution bug exploited in the wild (Nextcloud specifically called out): This is specifically calling out Nextcloud setup with Nginx as the webserver? From a quick browse, it looks like it could affect nginx proxies as well. 
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 From Fedora 30, installing php. PHP-FPM is a weak dependencies for php and also nginx-filesystem gets installed too.
  
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 @black3dynamite said in Nasty PHP7 remote code execution bug exploited in the wild (Nextcloud specifically called out): From Fedora 30, installing php. PHP-FPM is a weak dependencies for php and also nginx-filesystem gets installed too.
  haha weak dependency, no body called me that in years.  





