CVE-2026-43483

MEDIUM

KVM: SVM: Set/clear CR8 write interception when AVIC is (de)activated

Title source: cna
STIX 2.1

Description

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: KVM: SVM: Set/clear CR8 write interception when AVIC is (de)activated Explicitly set/clear CR8 write interception when AVIC is (de)activated to fix a bug where KVM leaves the interception enabled after AVIC is activated. E.g. if KVM emulates INIT=>WFS while AVIC is deactivated, CR8 will remain intercepted in perpetuity. On its own, the dangling CR8 intercept is "just" a performance issue, but combined with the TPR sync bug fixed by commit d02e48830e3f ("KVM: SVM: Sync TPR from LAPIC into VMCB::V_TPR even if AVIC is active"), the danging intercept is fatal to Windows guests as the TPR seen by hardware gets wildly out of sync with reality. Note, VMX isn't affected by the bug as TPR_THRESHOLD is explicitly ignored when Virtual Interrupt Delivery is enabled, i.e. when APICv is active in KVM's world. I.e. there's no need to trigger update_cr8_intercept(), this is firmly an SVM implementation flaw/detail. WARN if KVM gets a CR8 write #VMEXIT while AVIC is active, as KVM should never enter the guest with AVIC enabled and CR8 writes intercepted. [Squash fix to avic_deactivate_vmcb. - Paolo]

Scores

CVSS v3 5.5
EPSS 0.0011
EPSS Percentile 1.8%
Attack Vector LOCAL
CVSS:3.1/AV:L/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H

Details

Status published
Products (21)
linux/Kernel 4.7.0 - 6.1.167linux
linux/Kernel 6.13.0 - 6.18.19linux
linux/Kernel 6.19.0 - 6.19.9linux
linux/Kernel 6.2.0 - 6.6.130linux
linux/Kernel 6.7.0 - 6.12.78linux
Linux/Linux < 4.7
Linux/Linux 3bbf3565f48ce3999b5a12cde946f81bd4475312 - 01651e7751edbbc0fb4598f8367a3dabcfc8c182
Linux/Linux 3bbf3565f48ce3999b5a12cde946f81bd4475312 - 737410b32bd615b321da4fbeda490351b9af5e8b
Linux/Linux 3bbf3565f48ce3999b5a12cde946f81bd4475312 - 816fa1dfae4532e851b1fe6b2434c753ecbd86c7
Linux/Linux 3bbf3565f48ce3999b5a12cde946f81bd4475312 - 87d0f901a9bd8ae6be57249c737f20ac0cace93d
... and 11 more
Published May 13, 2026
Tracked Since May 13, 2026