Follow @Openwall on Twitter for new release announcements and other news
[<prev] [next>] [day] [month] [year] [list]
Message-Id: <E1YsUdu-0008EI-DZ@xenbits.xen.org>
Date: Wed, 13 May 2015 11:16:02 +0000
From: Xen.org security team <security@....org>
To: xen-announce@...ts.xen.org, xen-devel@...ts.xen.org,
 xen-users@...ts.xen.org, oss-security@...ts.openwall.com
CC: Xen.org security team <security@....org>
Subject: Xen Security Advisory 133 (CVE-2015-3456) - Privilege escalation
 via emulated floppy disk drive

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

            Xen Security Advisory CVE-2015-3456 / XSA-133
                              version 2

          Privilege escalation via emulated floppy disk drive

UPDATES IN VERSION 2
====================

Public release.

ISSUE DESCRIPTION
=================

The code in qemu which emulates a floppy disk controller did not
correctly bounds check accesses to an array and therefore was
vulnerable to a buffer overflow attack.

IMPACT
======

A guest which has access to an emulated floppy device can exploit this
vulnerability to take over the qemu process elevating its privilege to
that of the qemu process.

VULNERABLE SYSTEMS
==================

All Xen systems running x86 HVM guests without stubdomains are
vulnerable to this depending on the specific guest configuration. The
default configuration is vulnerable.

Guests using either the traditional "qemu-xen" or upstream qemu device
models are vulnerable.

Guests using a qemu-dm stubdomain to run the device model are only
vulnerable to takeover of that service domain.

Systems running only x86 PV guests are not vulnerable.

ARM systems are not vulnerable.

MITIGATION
==========

Enabling stubdomains will mitigate this issue, by reducing the
escalation to only those privileges accorded to the service domain.

qemu-dm stubdomains are only available with the traditional "qemu-xen"
version.

CREDITS
=======

This issue was discovered by Jason Geffner, Senior Security Researcher
at CrowdStrike.

RESOLUTION
==========

Applying the appropriate attached patch resolves this issue.

xsa133-qemuu.patch           qemu-upstream-unstable, Xen 4.5.x, Xen 4.4.x
xsa133-qemuu-4.3-4.2.patch   qemu-upstream-unstable, Xen 4.3.x, Xen 4.2.x
xsa133-qemut.patch           qemu-xen-unstable, Xen 4.5.x, Xen 4.4.x, Xen 4.3.x, Xen 4.2.x

$ sha256sum xsa133*.patch
e7ca0106a9d4bfe472b3b52bbed8646b47305634ff16c3e17ed6185296a7e7ff  xsa133-qemut.patch
0cbc0415ef63bc195a0338441f3770d9fe6741e894879e35d1a6609ad028e42f  xsa133-qemuu.patch
cf735c1ecb6a40ca57d408e5c01725eca5b9b0a14b1d31b4362dc3f036bdeb28  xsa133-qemuu-4.3-4.2.patch
$

DEPLOYMENT DURING EMBARGO
=========================

Deployment of the patches described above (or others which are
substantially similar) is permitted during the embargo, even on
public-facing systems with untrusted guest users and administrators.

But: Deployment of the mitigation by enabling stubdomains is NOT
permitted (except on systems used and administered only by
organisations which are members of the Xen Project Security Issues
Predisclosure List).  Specifically, deployment on public cloud systems
is NOT permitted.  This is because this configuration change may be
visible to the guest.

Also, distribution of updated software is prohibited (except to other
members of the predisclosure list).

Predisclosure list members who wish to deploy significantly different
patches and/or mitigations, please contact the Xen Project Security
Team.

(Note: this during-embargo deployment notice is retained in
post-embargo publicly released Xen Project advisories, even though it
is then no longer applicable.  This is to enable the community to have
oversight of the Xen Project Security Team's decisionmaking.)

For more information about permissible uses of embargoed information,
consult the Xen Project community's agreed Security Policy:
  http://www.xenproject.org/security-policy.html
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1.4.12 (GNU/Linux)

iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJVUzJdAAoJEIP+FMlX6CvZnJcH/iszFBI+ltmOGxfCtSmnnkdu
6GZUFCVimeVG2ZfDCe1Bvw63ZMeB8AMUr2KmFrg0pOfC7m1Mc/4UhczpqeY9G1i0
kPCcNiK37Ju0otFN1AODHaYGhu6pgfTM+QV1muFVXHf9QibmH+vEy7HEN34Mtv/2
gGRmxLJnkHFME2sISuqhDsxIMf5QWN28I412/QqK8/mJMuvCJHqbLs/fv9f0uj9g
sgAVCb3gsqNS7SSK1v49PqK+lQV+BkPR8pi8ODdL301iZWfu8PbVpYa5A84LVQF0
4ZnlVfWqeKXF7GlsuviinhQIoUIvSktf9tg65fM48Thk0UUp+MyHVkh4GkT/+Eo=
=rN8t
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----

Download attachment "xsa133-qemut.patch" of type "application/octet-stream" (2755 bytes)

Download attachment "xsa133-qemuu.patch" of type "application/octet-stream" (2773 bytes)

Download attachment "xsa133-qemuu-4.3-4.2.patch" of type "application/octet-stream" (2743 bytes)

Powered by blists - more mailing lists

Please check out the Open Source Software Security Wiki, which is counterpart to this mailing list.

Confused about mailing lists and their use? Read about mailing lists on Wikipedia and check out these guidelines on proper formatting of your messages.