CVE-2024-47674

MEDIUM

Linux Kernel - Memory Corruption

Title source: llm
STIX 2.1

Description

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: mm: avoid leaving partial pfn mappings around in error case As Jann points out, PFN mappings are special, because unlike normal memory mappings, there is no lifetime information associated with the mapping - it is just a raw mapping of PFNs with no reference counting of a 'struct page'. That's all very much intentional, but it does mean that it's easy to mess up the cleanup in case of errors. Yes, a failed mmap() will always eventually clean up any partial mappings, but without any explicit lifetime in the page table mapping itself, it's very easy to do the error handling in the wrong order. In particular, it's easy to mistakenly free the physical backing store before the page tables are actually cleaned up and (temporarily) have stale dangling PTE entries. To make this situation less error-prone, just make sure that any partial pfn mapping is torn down early, before any other error handling.

Scores

CVSS v3 5.5
EPSS 0.0001
EPSS Percentile 1.9%
Attack Vector LOCAL
CVSS:3.1/AV:L/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H

CISA SSVC

Vulnrichment
Exploitation none
Automatable no
Technical Impact partial

Details

CWE
CWE-459
Status published
Products (6)
linux/Kernel 5.13.0 - 5.15.168linux
linux/Kernel 5.16.0 - 6.1.111linux
linux/Kernel 6.2.0 - 6.6.52linux
linux/Kernel 6.7.0 - 6.10.11linux
linux/linux_kernel 6.11 rc1 (7 CPE variants)
linux/linux_kernel < 5.15.168
Published Oct 15, 2024
Tracked Since Feb 18, 2026