SB2021072291 - Debian update for linux



SB2021072291 - Debian update for linux

Published: July 22, 2021 Updated: August 9, 2022

Security Bulletin ID SB2021072291
Severity
Medium
Patch available
YES
Number of vulnerabilities 4
Exploitation vector Local access
Highest impact Code execution

Breakdown by Severity

Medium 25% Low 75%
  • Low
  • Medium
  • High
  • Critical

Description

This security bulletin contains information about 4 secuirty vulnerabilities.


1) Permissions, Privileges, and Access Controls (CVE-ID: CVE-2020-36311)

The vulnerability allows a local user to perform a denial of service attack.

The vulnerability exists due to an error in arch/x86/kvm/svm/sev.c in Linux kernel, which allows soft lockup by triggering destruction of a large SEV VM (which requires unregistering many encrypted regions).


2) Race condition (CVE-ID: CVE-2021-3609)

The vulnerability allows a local user to escalate privileges on the system.

The vulnerability exists due to a race condition in the CAN BCM networking protocol (net/can/bcm.c) in the Linux kernel ranging from version 2.6.25 to mainline 5.13-rc6. A local user can exploit the race and gain unauthorized access to sensitive information and escalate privileges on the system.


3) Integer overflow (CVE-ID: CVE-2021-33909)

The vulnerability allows a local user to escalate privileges on the system.

The vulnerability exists due to integer overflow during size_t-to-int conversion when creating, mounting, and deleting a deep directory structure whose total path length exceeds 1GB. An unprivileged local user can write up to 10-byte string to an offset of exactly -2GB-10B below the beginning of a vmalloc()ated kernel buffer.

Successful exploitation of vulnerability may allow an attacker to exploit the our-of-bounds write vulnerability to execute arbitrary code with root privileges.


4) Use of uninitialized resource (CVE-ID: CVE-2021-34693)

The vulnerability allows a local user to gain access to sensitive information.

The vulnerability exists due to net/can/bcm.c in the Linux kernel through 5.12.10 allows local users to obtain sensitive information from kernel stack memory because parts of a data structure are uninitialized.


Remediation

Install update from vendor's website.