10 matches found
EUVD-2025-208410
If two sibling jails are restricted to separate filesystem trees, which is to say that neither of the two jail root directories is an ancestor of the other, jailed processes may nonetheless be able to access a shared directory via a nullfs mount, if the administrator has configured one. In this...
CVE-2025-15576 Jail chroot escape via fd exchange with a different jail
If two sibling jails are restricted to separate filesystem trees, which is to say that neither of the two jail root directories is an ancestor of the other, jailed processes may nonetheless be able to access a shared directory via a nullfs mount, if the administrator has configured one. In this...
CVE-2025-15576
CVE-2025-15576 describes a jail/chroot escape in FreeBSD. When two sibling jails are restricted to separate filesystem trees, processes in the two jails can still exchange directory descriptors via a unix domain socket and access a shared directory mounted with nullfs. During a filesystem name lo...
CVE-2025-15576 Jail chroot escape via fd exchange with a different jail
If two sibling jails are restricted to separate filesystem trees, which is to say that neither of the two jail root directories is an ancestor of the other, jailed processes may nonetheless be able to access a shared directory via a nullfs mount, if the administrator has configured one. In this...
CVE-2025-15547 Jail escape by a privileged user via nullfs
By default, jailed processes cannot mount filesystems, including nullfs4. However, the allow.mount.nullfs option enables mounting nullfs filesystems, subject to privilege checks. If a privileged user within a jail is able to nullfs-mount directories, a limitation of the kernel's path lookup logic...
CVE-2025-15547
This CVE (CVE-2025-15547) maps to FreeBSD Jail escape via nullfs. Problem: if a jail is configured with allow.mount.nullfs, a privileged user inside the jail can nullfs-mount directories, exploiting kernel path-lookup limitations to escape the jail and access the host/parent filesystem. Affects F...
FreeBSD : FreeBSD -- Jail chroot escape via fd exchange with a different jail (a88f5b2d-11e9-11f1-8148-bc241121aa0a)
The version of FreeBSD installed on the remote host is prior to tested version. It is, therefore, affected by a vulnerability as referenced in the a88f5b2d-11e9-11f1-8148-bc241121aa0a advisory. If two sibling jails are restricted to separate filesystem trees, which is to say that neither of the t...
FreeBSD Security Advisory - FreeBSD-SA-26:04.jail
FreeBSD Security Advisory - If two sibling jails are restricted to separate filesystem trees, which is to say that neither of the two jail root directories is an ancestor of the other, jailed processes may nonetheless be able to access a shared directory via a nullfs mount, if the administrator h...
FreeBSD -- Jail chroot escape via fd exchange with a different jail
Problem Description: If two sibling jails are restricted to separate filesystem trees, which is to say that neither of the two jail root directories is an ancestor of the other, jailed processes may nonetheless be able to access a shared directory via a nullfs mount, if the administrator has...
FreeBSD -- Jail escape by a privileged user via nullfs
Problem Description: By default, jailed processes cannot mount filesystems, including nullfs4. However, the allow.mount.nullfs option enables mounting nullfs filesystems, subject to privilege checks. If a privileged user within a jail is able to nullfs-mount directories, a limitation of the...