DSA-3729-1 xen -- security update

Related Vulnerabilities: CVE-2016-7777   CVE-2016-9379   CVE-2016-9380   CVE-2016-9382   CVE-2016-9383   CVE-2016-9385   CVE-2016-9386  

Multiple vulnerabilities have been discovered in the Xen hypervisor. The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project identifies the following problems: CVE-2016-7777 (XSA-190) Jan Beulich from SUSE discovered that Xen does not properly honor CR0.TS and CR0.EM for x86 HVM guests, potentially allowing guest users to read or modify FPU, MMX, or XMM register state information belonging to arbitrary tasks on the guest by modifying an instruction while the hypervisor is preparing to emulate it. CVE-2016-9379, CVE-2016-9380 (XSA-198) Daniel Richman and Gabor Szarka of the Cambridge University Student-Run Computing Facility discovered that pygrub, the boot loader emulator, fails to quote (or sanity check) its results when reporting them to its caller. A malicious guest administrator can take advantage of this flaw to cause an information leak or denial of service. CVE-2016-9382 (XSA-192) Jan Beulich of SUSE discovered that Xen does not properly handle x86 task switches to VM86 mode. A unprivileged guest process can take advantage of this flaw to crash the guest or, escalate its privileges to that of the guest operating system. CVE-2016-9383 (XSA-195) George Dunlap of Citrix discovered that the Xen x86 64-bit bit test instruction emulation is broken. A malicious guest can take advantage of this flaw to modify arbitrary memory, allowing for arbitrary code execution, denial of service (host crash), or information leaks. CVE-2016-9385 (XSA-193) Andrew Cooper of Citrix discovered that Xen's x86 segment base write emulation lacks canonical address checks. A malicious guest administrator can take advantage of this flaw to crash the host, leading to a denial of service. CVE-2016-9386 (XSA-191) Andrew Cooper of Citrix discovered that x86 null segments are not always treated as unusable. An unprivileged guest user program may be able to elevate its privilege to that of the guest operating system. For the stable distribution (jessie), these problems have been fixed in version 4.4.1-9+deb8u8. We recommend that you upgrade your xen packages.

Debian Security Advisory

DSA-3729-1 xen -- security update

Date Reported:
07 Dec 2016
Affected Packages:
xen
Vulnerable:
Yes
Security database references:
In the Debian bugtracking system: Bug 845663, Bug 845664, Bug 845665, Bug 845668, Bug 845670.
In Mitre's CVE dictionary: CVE-2016-7777, CVE-2016-9379, CVE-2016-9380, CVE-2016-9382, CVE-2016-9383, CVE-2016-9385, CVE-2016-9386.
More information:

Multiple vulnerabilities have been discovered in the Xen hypervisor. The Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures project identifies the following problems:

  • CVE-2016-7777 (XSA-190)

    Jan Beulich from SUSE discovered that Xen does not properly honor CR0.TS and CR0.EM for x86 HVM guests, potentially allowing guest users to read or modify FPU, MMX, or XMM register state information belonging to arbitrary tasks on the guest by modifying an instruction while the hypervisor is preparing to emulate it.

  • CVE-2016-9379, CVE-2016-9380 (XSA-198)

    Daniel Richman and Gabor Szarka of the Cambridge University Student-Run Computing Facility discovered that pygrub, the boot loader emulator, fails to quote (or sanity check) its results when reporting them to its caller. A malicious guest administrator can take advantage of this flaw to cause an information leak or denial of service.

  • CVE-2016-9382 (XSA-192)

    Jan Beulich of SUSE discovered that Xen does not properly handle x86 task switches to VM86 mode. A unprivileged guest process can take advantage of this flaw to crash the guest or, escalate its privileges to that of the guest operating system.

  • CVE-2016-9383 (XSA-195)

    George Dunlap of Citrix discovered that the Xen x86 64-bit bit test instruction emulation is broken. A malicious guest can take advantage of this flaw to modify arbitrary memory, allowing for arbitrary code execution, denial of service (host crash), or information leaks.

  • CVE-2016-9385 (XSA-193)

    Andrew Cooper of Citrix discovered that Xen's x86 segment base write emulation lacks canonical address checks. A malicious guest administrator can take advantage of this flaw to crash the host, leading to a denial of service.

  • CVE-2016-9386 (XSA-191)

    Andrew Cooper of Citrix discovered that x86 null segments are not always treated as unusable. An unprivileged guest user program may be able to elevate its privilege to that of the guest operating system.

For the stable distribution (jessie), these problems have been fixed in version 4.4.1-9+deb8u8.

We recommend that you upgrade your xen packages.