Executive Summary

Informations
Name CVE-2024-42096 First vendor Publication 2024-07-29
Vendor Cve Last vendor Modification 2024-11-21

Security-Database Scoring CVSS v3

Cvss vector : N/A
Overall CVSS Score NA
Base Score NA Environmental Score NA
impact SubScore NA Temporal Score NA
Exploitabality Sub Score NA
 
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Security-Database Scoring CVSS v2

Cvss vector :
Cvss Base Score N/A Attack Range N/A
Cvss Impact Score N/A Attack Complexity N/A
Cvss Expoit Score N/A Authentication N/A
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Detail

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:

x86: stop playing stack games in profile_pc()

The 'profile_pc()' function is used for timer-based profiling, which isn't really all that relevant any more to begin with, but it also ends up making assumptions based on the stack layout that aren't necessarily valid.

Basically, the code tries to account the time spent in spinlocks to the caller rather than the spinlock, and while I support that as a concept, it's not worth the code complexity or the KASAN warnings when no serious profiling is done using timers anyway these days.

And the code really does depend on stack layout that is only true in the simplest of cases. We've lost the comment at some point (I think when the 32-bit and 64-bit code was unified), but it used to say:

Assume the lock function has either no stack frame or a copy
of eflags from PUSHF.

which explains why it just blindly loads a word or two straight off the stack pointer and then takes a minimal look at the values to just check if they might be eflags or the return pc:

Eflags always has bits 22 and up cleared unlike kernel addresses

but that basic stack layout assumption assumes that there isn't any lock debugging etc going on that would complicate the code and cause a stack frame.

It causes KASAN unhappiness reported for years by syzkaller [1] and others [2].

With no real practical reason for this any more, just remove the code.

Just for historical interest, here's some background commits relating to this code from 2006:

0cb91a229364 ("i386: Account spinlocks to the caller during profiling for !FP kernels")
31679f38d886 ("Simplify profile_pc on x86-64")

and a code unification from 2009:

ef4512882dbe ("x86: time_32/64.c unify profile_pc")

but the basics of this thing actually goes back to before the git tree.

Original Source

Url : http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2024-42096

Sources (Detail)

https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/093d9603b60093a9aaae942db56107f6432a5dca
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/161cef818545ecf980f0e2ebaf8ba7326ce53c2b
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/16222beb9f8e5ceb0beeb5cbe54bef16df501a92
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/27c3be840911b15a3f24ed623f86153c825b6b29
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/2d07fea561d64357fb7b3f3751e653bf20306d77
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/49c09ca35a5f521d7fa18caf62fdf378f15e8aa4
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/65ebdde16e7f5da99dbf8a548fb635837d78384e
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/a3b65c8cbc139bfce9541bc81c1bb766e5ba3f68
Source Url

Alert History

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0
1
2
Date Informations
2024-11-25 09:23:21
  • Multiple Updates
2024-07-30 17:27:24
  • Multiple Updates
2024-07-30 00:27:22
  • First insertion