DSA-4495-1 linux -- security update

Related Vulnerabilities: CVE-2018-20836   CVE-2019-1125   CVE-2019-1999   CVE-2019-10207   CVE-2019-10638   CVE-2019-12817   CVE-2019-12984   CVE-2019-13233   CVE-2019-13631   CVE-2019-13648   CVE-2019-14283   CVE-2019-14284  

Several vulnerabilities have been discovered in the Linux kernel that may lead to a privilege escalation, denial of service or information leaks. CVE-2018-20836 chenxiang reported a race condition in libsas, the kernel subsystem supporting Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) devices, which could lead to a use-after-free. It is not clear how this might be exploited. CVE-2019-1125 It was discovered that most x86 processors could speculatively skip a conditional SWAPGS instruction used when entering the kernel from user mode, and/or could speculatively execute it when it should be skipped. This is a subtype of Spectre variant 1, which could allow local users to obtain sensitive information from the kernel or other processes. It has been mitigated by using memory barriers to limit speculative execution. Systems using an i386 kernel are not affected as the kernel does not use SWAPGS. CVE-2019-1999 A race condition was discovered in the Android binder driver, which could lead to a use-after-free. If this driver is loaded, a local user might be able to use this for denial-of-service (memory corruption) or for privilege escalation. CVE-2019-10207 The syzkaller tool found a potential null dereference in various drivers for UART-attached Bluetooth adapters. A local user with access to a pty device or other suitable tty device could use this for denial-of-service (BUG/oops). CVE-2019-10638 Amit Klein and Benny Pinkas discovered that the generation of IP packet IDs used a weak hash function, jhash. This could enable tracking individual computers as they communicate with different remote servers and from different networks. The siphash function is now used instead. CVE-2019-12817 It was discovered that on the PowerPC (ppc64el) architecture, the hash page table (HPT) code did not correctly handle fork() in a process with memory mapped at addresses above 512 TiB. This could lead to a use-after-free in the kernel, or unintended sharing of memory between user processes. A local user could use this for privilege escalation. Systems using the radix MMU, or a custom kernel with a 4 KiB page size, are not affected. CVE-2019-12984 It was discovered that the NFC protocol implementation did not properly validate a netlink control message, potentially leading to a null pointer dereference. A local user on a system with an NFC interface could use this for denial-of-service (BUG/oops). CVE-2019-13233 Jann Horn discovered a race condition on the x86 architecture, in use of the LDT. This could lead to a use-after-free. A local user could possibly use this for denial-of-service. CVE-2019-13631 It was discovered that the gtco driver for USB input tablets could overrun a stack buffer with constant data while parsing the device's descriptor. A physically present user with a specially constructed USB device could use this to cause a denial-of-service (BUG/oops), or possibly for privilege escalation. CVE-2019-13648 Praveen Pandey reported that on PowerPC (ppc64el) systems without Transactional Memory (TM), the kernel would still attempt to restore TM state passed to the sigreturn() system call. A local user could use this for denial-of-service (oops). CVE-2019-14283 The syzkaller tool found a missing bounds check in the floppy disk driver. A local user with access to a floppy disk device, with a disk present, could use this to read kernel memory beyond the I/O buffer, possibly obtaining sensitive information. CVE-2019-14284 The syzkaller tool found a potential division-by-zero in the floppy disk driver. A local user with access to a floppy disk device could use this for denial-of-service (oops). For the stable distribution (buster), these problems have been fixed in version 4.19.37-5+deb10u2. For the oldstable distribution (stretch), these problems will be fixed soon. We recommend that you upgrade your linux packages. For the detailed security status of linux please refer to its security tracker page at: https://security-tracker.debian.org/tracker/linux

Debian Security Advisory

DSA-4495-1 linux -- security update

Date Reported:
10 Aug 2019
Affected Packages:
linux
Vulnerable:
Yes
Security database references:
In Mitre's CVE dictionary: CVE-2018-20836, CVE-2019-1125, CVE-2019-1999, CVE-2019-10207, CVE-2019-10638, CVE-2019-12817, CVE-2019-12984, CVE-2019-13233, CVE-2019-13631, CVE-2019-13648, CVE-2019-14283, CVE-2019-14284.
More information:

Several vulnerabilities have been discovered in the Linux kernel that may lead to a privilege escalation, denial of service or information leaks.

  • CVE-2018-20836

    chenxiang reported a race condition in libsas, the kernel subsystem supporting Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) devices, which could lead to a use-after-free. It is not clear how this might be exploited.

  • CVE-2019-1125

    It was discovered that most x86 processors could speculatively skip a conditional SWAPGS instruction used when entering the kernel from user mode, and/or could speculatively execute it when it should be skipped. This is a subtype of Spectre variant 1, which could allow local users to obtain sensitive information from the kernel or other processes. It has been mitigated by using memory barriers to limit speculative execution. Systems using an i386 kernel are not affected as the kernel does not use SWAPGS.

  • CVE-2019-1999

    A race condition was discovered in the Android binder driver, which could lead to a use-after-free. If this driver is loaded, a local user might be able to use this for denial-of-service (memory corruption) or for privilege escalation.

  • CVE-2019-10207

    The syzkaller tool found a potential null dereference in various drivers for UART-attached Bluetooth adapters. A local user with access to a pty device or other suitable tty device could use this for denial-of-service (BUG/oops).

  • CVE-2019-10638

    Amit Klein and Benny Pinkas discovered that the generation of IP packet IDs used a weak hash function, jhash. This could enable tracking individual computers as they communicate with different remote servers and from different networks. The siphash function is now used instead.

  • CVE-2019-12817

    It was discovered that on the PowerPC (ppc64el) architecture, the hash page table (HPT) code did not correctly handle fork() in a process with memory mapped at addresses above 512 TiB. This could lead to a use-after-free in the kernel, or unintended sharing of memory between user processes. A local user could use this for privilege escalation. Systems using the radix MMU, or a custom kernel with a 4 KiB page size, are not affected.

  • CVE-2019-12984

    It was discovered that the NFC protocol implementation did not properly validate a netlink control message, potentially leading to a null pointer dereference. A local user on a system with an NFC interface could use this for denial-of-service (BUG/oops).

  • CVE-2019-13233

    Jann Horn discovered a race condition on the x86 architecture, in use of the LDT. This could lead to a use-after-free. A local user could possibly use this for denial-of-service.

  • CVE-2019-13631

    It was discovered that the gtco driver for USB input tablets could overrun a stack buffer with constant data while parsing the device's descriptor. A physically present user with a specially constructed USB device could use this to cause a denial-of-service (BUG/oops), or possibly for privilege escalation.

  • CVE-2019-13648

    Praveen Pandey reported that on PowerPC (ppc64el) systems without Transactional Memory (TM), the kernel would still attempt to restore TM state passed to the sigreturn() system call. A local user could use this for denial-of-service (oops).

  • CVE-2019-14283

    The syzkaller tool found a missing bounds check in the floppy disk driver. A local user with access to a floppy disk device, with a disk present, could use this to read kernel memory beyond the I/O buffer, possibly obtaining sensitive information.

  • CVE-2019-14284

    The syzkaller tool found a potential division-by-zero in the floppy disk driver. A local user with access to a floppy disk device could use this for denial-of-service (oops).

For the stable distribution (buster), these problems have been fixed in version 4.19.37-5+deb10u2.

For the oldstable distribution (stretch), these problems will be fixed soon.

We recommend that you upgrade your linux packages.

For the detailed security status of linux please refer to its security tracker page at: https://security-tracker.debian.org/tracker/linux