Information Exposure Affecting kernel-bootwrapper package, versions *
Threat Intelligence
Do your applications use this vulnerable package?
In a few clicks we can analyze your entire application and see what components are vulnerable in your application, and suggest you quick fixes.
Test your applications- Snyk ID SNYK-RHEL7-KERNELBOOTWRAPPER-8345129
- published 6 Nov 2024
- disclosed 5 Nov 2024
Introduced: 5 Nov 2024
New CVE-2024-50102 Open this link in a new tabHow to fix?
There is no fixed version for RHEL:7
kernel-bootwrapper
.
NVD Description
Note: Versions mentioned in the description apply only to the upstream kernel-bootwrapper
package and not the kernel-bootwrapper
package as distributed by RHEL
.
See How to fix?
for RHEL:7
relevant fixed versions and status.
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:
x86: fix user address masking non-canonical speculation issue
It turns out that AMD has a "Meltdown Lite(tm)" issue with non-canonical accesses in kernel space. And so using just the high bit to decide whether an access is in user space or kernel space ends up with the good old "leak speculative data" if you have the right gadget using the result:
CVE-2020-12965 “Transient Execution of Non-Canonical Accesses“
Now, the kernel surrounds the access with a STAC/CLAC pair, and those instructions end up serializing execution on older Zen architectures, which closes the speculation window.
But that was true only up until Zen 5, which renames the AC bit [1]. That improves performance of STAC/CLAC a lot, but also means that the speculation window is now open.
Note that this affects not just the new address masking, but also the regular valid_user_address() check used by access_ok(), and the asm version of the sign bit check in the get_user() helpers.
It does not affect put_user() or clear_user() variants, since there's no speculative result to be used in a gadget for those operations.