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Message-ID: <856d6efa0e9b4dd39030e7372a17e3dba2db2aef.camel@neuling.org>
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2019 23:16:48 +1000
From: Michael Neuling <mikey@...ling.org>
To: oss-security <oss-security@...ts.openwall.com>
Cc: Michael Ellerman <michael@...erman.id.au>,
linuxppc-dev@...ts.ozlabs.org, linux-kernel@...r.kernel.org,
Linuxppc-users <linuxppc-users@...ts.ozlabs.org>,
Gustavo Romero <gromero@...ux.vnet.ibm.com>
Subject: CVE-2019-15030: Linux kernel: powerpc: data leak with FP/VMX
triggerable by unavailable exception in transaction
The Linux kernel for powerpc since v4.12 has a bug in it's TM handling where any
user can read the FP/VMX registers of a difference user's process. Users of TM +
FP/VMX can also experience corruption of their FP/VMX state.
To trigger the bug, a process starts a transaction and reads a FP/VMX register.
This transaction can then fail which causes a rollback to the checkpointed
state. Due to the kernel taking an FP/VMX unavaliable exception inside a
transaction and the kernel's incorrect handling of this, the checkpointed state
can be set to the FP/VMX registers of another process. This checkpointed state
can then be read by the process hence leaking data from one process to another.
The trigger for this bug is an FP/VMX unavailable exception inside a
transaction, hence the process needs FP/VMX off when starting the transaction.
FP/VMX availability is under the control of the kernel and is transparent to the
user, hence the user has to retry the transaction many times to trigger this
bug.
All 64-bit machines where TM is present are affected. This includes all POWER8
variants and POWER9 VMs under KVM or LPARs under PowerVM. POWER9 bare metal
doesn't support TM and hence is not affected.
The bug was introduced in commit:
f48e91e87e67 ("powerpc/tm: Fix FP and VMX register corruption")
Which was originally merged in v4.12
The upstream fix is here:
https://git.kernel.org/torvalds/c/8205d5d98ef7f155de211f5e2eb6ca03d95a5a60
The fix can be verified by running the tm-poison from the kernel selftests. This
test is in a patch here:
https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/1157467/
which should eventually end up here:
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/tools/testing/selftests/powerpc/tm/tm-poison.c
cheers
Mikey
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