CVE-2026-52977

ANALYSIS PENDING

futex: Prevent lockup in requeue-PI during signal/ timeout wakeup

Title source: cna
STIX 2.1

Description

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: futex: Prevent lockup in requeue-PI during signal/ timeout wakeup During wait-requeue-pi (task A) and requeue-PI (task B) the following race can happen: Task A Task B futex_wait_requeue_pi() futex_setup_timer() futex_do_wait() futex_requeue() CLASS(hb, hb1)(&key1); CLASS(hb, hb2)(&key2); *timeout* futex_requeue_pi_wakeup_sync() requeue_state = Q_REQUEUE_PI_IGNORE *blocks on hb->lock* futex_proxy_trylock_atomic() futex_requeue_pi_prepare() Q_REQUEUE_PI_IGNORE => -EAGAIN double_unlock_hb(hb1, hb2) *retry* Task B acquires both hb locks and attempts to acquire the PI-lock of the top most waiter (task B). Task A is leaving early due to a signal/ timeout and started removing itself from the queue. It updates its requeue_state but can not remove it from the list because this requires the hb lock which is owned by task B. Usually task A is able to swoop the lock after task B unlocked it. However if task B is of higher priority then task A may not be able to wake up in time and acquire the lock before task B gets it again. Especially on a UP system where A is never scheduled. As a result task A blocks on the lock and task B busy loops, trying to make progress but live locks the system instead. Tragic. This can be fixed by removing the top most waiter from the list in this case. This allows task B to grab the next top waiter (if any) in the next iteration and make progress. Remove the top most waiter if futex_requeue_pi_prepare() fails. Let the waiter conditionally remove itself from the list in handle_early_requeue_pi_wakeup().

Scores

EPSS 0.0017
EPSS Percentile 6.8%

Details

Status published
Products (19)
linux/Kernel 5.15.0 - 6.1.175linux
linux/Kernel 6.13.0 - 6.18.33linux
linux/Kernel 6.19.0 - 7.0.10linux
linux/Kernel 6.2.0 - 6.6.141linux
linux/Kernel 6.7.0 - 6.12.91linux
Linux/Linux < 5.15
Linux/Linux 07d91ef510fb16a2e0ca7453222105835b7ba3b8 - 0304d60abb9dcc02bc7fe6d1850f4ca206e8f1a0
Linux/Linux 07d91ef510fb16a2e0ca7453222105835b7ba3b8 - 0aacb6d18f76552e3e0ee25d9f40d21b3486f4cf
Linux/Linux 07d91ef510fb16a2e0ca7453222105835b7ba3b8 - 4e0ed44e51727d56244a822ab941efe507c47966
Linux/Linux 07d91ef510fb16a2e0ca7453222105835b7ba3b8 - 69a7cfc66405aeaa2483147653d031b3592ffc9c
... and 9 more
Published Jun 24, 2026
Tracked Since Jun 24, 2026