Xen.org security team
2014-May-16 10:35 UTC
Xen Security Advisory 95 (CVE-2014-3714, CVE-2014-3715, CVE-2014-3716, CVE-2014-3717) - input handling vulnerabilities loading guest kernel on ARM
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Xen Security Advisory CVE-2014-3714,CVE-2014-3715,CVE-2014-3716,CVE-2014-3717 / XSA-95 version 3 input handling vulnerabilities loading guest kernel on ARM UPDATES IN VERSION 3 =================== Several CVE numbers, CVE-2014-{3714,3715,3716,3717} have been assigned to the issues described here. References have been added to the issue description. ISSUE DESCRIPTION ================ When loading a 32-bit ARM guest kernel the Xen tools did not correctly validate the length of the kernel against the actual image size. This would then lead to an overrun on the input buffer when loading the kernel into guest RAM (CVE-2014-3714). Furthermore when checking a 32-bit guest kernel for an appended DTB, the Xen tools were prone to additional overruns also leading to an overrun on the input buffer when loading the kernel into guest RAM (CVE-2014-3715). Also, the tools would access a field in the putative DTB header without checking for its alignment (CVE-2014-3716). When loading a 64-bit ARM guest kernel the tools similarly did not fully validate the requested load addresses, possibly leading to an overrun on the input buffer when loading the kernel into guest RAM (CVE-2014-3717). IMPACT ===== An attacker who can control the kernel used to boot a guest can exploit these issues. Exploiting the overflow issues allows information which follows the guest kernel in the toolstack address space to be copied into the guest's memory, constituting an information leak. Alternatively either the overflow or alignment issues could be used to crash the toolstack process, leading to a denial of service. VULNERABLE SYSTEMS ================= ARM systems are vulnerable from Xen 4.4 onwards. MITIGATION ========= Ensuring that guests use only trustworthy kernels will avoid this problem. CREDITS ====== This issue was discovered by Thomas Leonard. RESOLUTION ========= Applying the attached patch resolves this issue. xsa95.patch xen-unstable, Xen 4.4.x $ sha256sum xsa95*.patch 1ab63ff126b92e752e88b240838dd66b66415604eaa3e49e373cb50ad3cdd0af xsa95.patch $ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.12 (GNU/Linux) iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJTdenGAAoJEIP+FMlX6CvZHbAIAI581kr07vf1KNlGVIyfOoJN y8iqAS4n4D8JM7HJgoC+4Yf8HXA+KljR2Pg31ciY1eryWFibvZiBt1aykZVS7y+c nVMHNoOVv0HmA/RycMT06iNy8BRThat4QY5/Eov8voRESU0yCPXTgoNg1iBLt5Eb ZG31pI2Nk+xOmC4+wtJ8BLv+k2dV6vLNNaZB60OrXL7VOFlQlyCRrUSy3wy86y+h FkhelkAWnRBpYOBn0ZSJayVlMH1fRtZWSYQOhDQHt14laJE/UJVQ5gNnSJDCQevS io2i30xT38SfdoBPfiTj6yfgmmT3YmJRZvJ7QnSqBDWL1r4xcTCtHB7Uyy94X4w=ivP8 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@lists.xen.org http://lists.xen.org/xen-users