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8.8

CVE-2026-41489: Pi-hole DNS Sinkhole: Unrestricted File Deletion and Recreation

CVE-2026-41489
Summary

An attacker with Pi-hole privileges can delete and recreate any file on the system, potentially gaining root access. This is fixed in Pi-hole Core 6.4.2 and FTL 6.6.1. Update your Pi-hole installation to the latest version to protect against this vulnerability.

Original title
Pi-hole is a DNS sinkhole that protects devices from unwanted content without installing any client-side software. From 6.0 to before Core 6.4.2 and FTL 6.6.1, two shell scripts executed as root by...
Original description
Pi-hole is a DNS sinkhole that protects devices from unwanted content without installing any client-side software. From 6.0 to before Core 6.4.2 and FTL 6.6.1, two shell scripts executed as root by systemd (pihole-FTL-prestart.sh and pihole-FTL-poststop.sh) read the files.pid path from this config without validation and use it in privileged file operations (install and rm -f). By writing an arbitrary path into files.pid, an attacker with pihole privilege can cause root to delete and then recreate any file on the system outside the ProtectSystem=full-restricted directories, gaining write access to it. On a default Pi-hole installation this yields local privilege escalation to root via SSH authorized keys manipulation. If /root/.ssh/authorized_keys does not exist (default on fresh installs), only ExecStartPre is required. If the file exists, ExecStopPost deletes it first, and the same restart triggers both hooks in sequence. This vulnerability is fixed in Core 6.4.2 and FTL 6.6.1.
nvd CVSS3.1 8.8
Vulnerability type
CWE-15
CWE-269 Improper Privilege Management
CWE-732 Incorrect Permission Assignment for Critical Resource
Published: 11 May 2026 · Updated: 18 May 2026 · First seen: 11 May 2026