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OVAL

RHSA-2019:1175-01 -- Redhat SLOF, hivex, libguestfs, libguestfs-winsupport, libiscsi, libssh2, libvirt, libvirt-dbus, libvirt-python, nbdkit, netcf, perl-Sys-Virt, qemu-kvm, seabios, sgabios, supermin, qemu-guest-agent

ID: oval:org.secpod.oval:def:502714Date: (C)2019-05-24   (M)2024-04-17
Class: PATCHFamily: unix




Kernel-based Virtual Machine offers a full virtualization solution for Linux on numerous hardware platforms. The virt:rhel module contains packages which provide user-space components used to run virtual machines using KVM. The packages also provide APIs for managing and interacting with the virtualized systems. Security Fix: * A flaw was found in the implementation of the "fill buffer", a mechanism used by modern CPUs when a cache-miss is made on L1 CPU cache. If an attacker can generate a load operation that would create a page fault, the execution will continue speculatively with incorrect data from the fill buffer while the data is fetched from higher level caches. This response time can be measured to infer data in the fill buffer. * Modern Intel microprocessors implement hardware-level micro-optimizations to improve the performance of writing data back to CPU caches. The write operation is split into STA and STD sub-operations. These sub-operations allow the processor to hand-off address generation logic into these sub-operations for optimized writes. Both of these sub-operations write to a shared distributed processor structure called the "processor store buffer". As a result, an unprivileged attacker could use this flaw to read private data resident within the CPU"s processor store buffer. * Microprocessors use a load port subcomponent to perform load operations from memory or IO. During a load operation, the load port receives data from the memory or IO subsystem and then provides the data to the CPU registers and operations in the CPUs pipelines. Stale load operations results are stored in the "load port" table until overwritten by newer operations. Certain load-port operations triggered by an attacker can be used to reveal data about previous stale requests leaking data back to the attacker via a timing side-channel. * Uncacheable memory on some microprocessors utilizing speculative execution may allow an authenticated user to potentially enable information disclosure via a side channel with local access. * QEMU: device_tree: heap buffer overflow while loading device tree blob * libssh2: Integer overflow in transport read resulting in out of bounds write * libssh2: Integer overflow in keyboard interactive handling resulting in out of bounds write * libssh2: Integer overflow in SSH packet processing channel resulting in out of bounds write * libssh2: Integer overflow in user authenticate keyboard interactive allows out-of-bounds writes For more details about the security issue, including the impact, a CVSS score, acknowledgments, and other related information, refer to the CVE page listed in the References section.

Platform:
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8
Product:
SLOF
hivex
libguestfs
libguestfs-winsupport
libiscsi
libssh2
libvirt
libvirt-dbus
libvirt-python
nbdkit
netcf
perl-Sys-Virt
qemu-kvm
seabios
sgabios
supermin
qemu-guest-agent
Reference:
RHSA-2019:1175-01
CVE-2018-12126
CVE-2018-12127
CVE-2018-12130
CVE-2018-20815
CVE-2019-3855
CVE-2019-3856
CVE-2019-3857
CVE-2019-3863
CVE-2019-11091
CVE    9
CVE-2018-20815
CVE-2019-3863
CVE-2019-3857
CVE-2019-3856
...
CPE    18
cpe:/a:libssh2:libssh2:1.6.0
cpe:/a:libvirt:libvirt-python
cpe:/a:redhat:libiscsi
cpe:/o:redhat:enterprise_linux:8
...

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