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CVE-2010-2238

Status Candidate

Overview

Red Hat libvirt, possibly 0.7.2 through 0.8.2, recurses into disk-image backing stores without extracting the defined disk backing-store format, which might allow guest OS users to read arbitrary files on the host OS, and possibly have unspecified other impact, via unknown vectors.

Related Files

Ubuntu Security Notice 1008-4
Posted Nov 9, 2010
Authored by Ubuntu | Site security.ubuntu.com

Ubuntu Security Notice 1008-4 - USN-1008-1 fixed vulnerabilities in libvirt. The upstream fixes for CVE-2010-2238 changed the behavior of libvirt such that the domain XML could not specify 'host_device' as the qemu sub-type. While libvirt 0.8.3 and later will longer support specifying this sub-type, this update restores the old behavior on Ubuntu 10.04 LTS. It was discovered that libvirt would probe disk backing stores without consulting the defined format for the disk. A privileged attacker in the guest could exploit this to read arbitrary files on the host. This issue only affected Ubuntu 10.04 LTS. By default, guests are confined by an AppArmor profile which provided partial protection against this flaw. It was discovered that libvirt would create new VMs without setting a backing store format. A privileged attacker in the guest could exploit this to read arbitrary files on the host. This issue did not affect Ubuntu 8.04 LTS. In Ubuntu 9.10 and later guests are confined by an AppArmor profile which provided partial protection against this flaw. Jeremy Nickurak discovered that libvirt created iptables rules with too lenient mappings of source ports. A privileged attacker in the guest could bypass intended restrictions to access privileged resources on the host.

tags | advisory, arbitrary, vulnerability
systems | linux, ubuntu
advisories | CVE-2010-2238
SHA-256 | a703c3b52b149defc693be88e89c0a6c02d09f2011f32766fcfe27409c7caa7d
Ubuntu Security Notice 1008-1
Posted Oct 22, 2010
Authored by Ubuntu | Site security.ubuntu.com

Ubuntu Security Notice 1008-1 - It was discovered that libvirt would probe disk backing stores without consulting the defined format for the disk. A privileged attacker in the guest could exploit this to read arbitrary files on the host. This issue only affected Ubuntu 10.04 LTS. By default, guests are confined by an AppArmor profile which provided partial protection against this flaw. It was discovered that libvirt would create new VMs without setting a backing store format. A privileged attacker in the guest could exploit this to read arbitrary files on the host. This issue did not affect Ubuntu 8.04 LTS. In Ubuntu 9.10 and later guests are confined by an AppArmor profile which provided partial protection against this flaw. Jeremy Nickurak discovered that libvirt created iptables rules with too lenient mappings of source ports. A privileged attacker in the guest could bypass intended restrictions to access privileged resources on the host.

tags | advisory, arbitrary
systems | linux, ubuntu
advisories | CVE-2010-2237, CVE-2010-2238, CVE-2010-2239, CVE-2010-2242
SHA-256 | c064ab38868a95bbd59b13f2896302bf08bc54ede0f09b2e2a8362053a7462e5
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