Executive Summary

Informations
Name CVE-2024-26826 First vendor Publication 2024-04-17
Vendor Cve Last vendor Modification 2024-04-17

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
 
Calculate full CVSS 3.0 Vectors scores

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
Calculate full CVSS 2.0 Vectors scores

Detail

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

mptcp: fix data re-injection from stale subflow

When the MPTCP PM detects that a subflow is stale, all the packet scheduler must re-inject all the mptcp-level unacked data. To avoid acquiring unneeded locks, it first try to check if any unacked data is present at all in the RTX queue, but such check is currently broken, as it uses TCP-specific helper on an MPTCP socket.

Funnily enough fuzzers and static checkers are happy, as the accessed memory still belongs to the mptcp_sock struct, and even from a functional perspective the recovery completed successfully, as the short-cut test always failed.

A recent unrelated TCP change - commit d5fed5addb2b ("tcp: reorganize tcp_sock fast path variables") - exposed the issue, as the tcp field reorganization makes the mptcp code always skip the re-inection.

Fix the issue dropping the bogus call: we are on a slow path, the early optimization proved once again to be evil.

Original Source

Url : http://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2024-26826

Sources (Detail)

https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/624902eab7abcb8731b333ec73f206d38d839cd8
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/6673d9f1c2cd984390550dbdf7d5ae07b20abbf8
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/6f95120f898b40d13fd441225ef511307853c9c2
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/b609c783c535493aa3fca22c7e40a120370b1ca5
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/b6c620dc43ccb4e802894e54b651cf81495e9598
Source Url

Alert History

If you want to see full details history, please login or register.
0
Date Informations
2024-04-17 17:28:38
  • First insertion