5 matches found
Astra Linux – Vulnerability in Linux 6.1
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: drm/i915/dpt: Makes the DPT object unshrinkable. In some scenarios, the DPT object gets shrunk, but the actual framebuffer does not, and thus it remains in the DPT’s vm-boundlist. Then, an attempt is made to rewrite the PTEs...
kernel: drm/i915/dpt: Make DPT object unshrinkable
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: drm/i915/dpt: Make DPT object unshrinkable In some scenarios, the DPT object gets shrunk but the actual framebuffer did not and thus its still there on the DPT's vm-boundlist. Then it tries to rewrite the PTEs via a stale CPU...
kernel: drm/i915/dpt: Make DPT object unshrinkable
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: drm/i915/dpt: Make DPT object unshrinkable In some scenarios, the DPT object gets shrunk but the actual framebuffer did not and thus its still there on the DPT's vm-boundlist. Then it tries to rewrite the PTEs via a stale CPU...
CVE-2024-40924 drm/i915/dpt: Make DPT object unshrinkable
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: drm/i915/dpt: Make DPT object unshrinkable In some scenarios, the DPT object gets shrunk but the actual framebuffer did not and thus its still there on the DPT's vm-boundlist. Then it tries to rewrite the PTEs via a stale CPU...
CVE-2024-40924 drm/i915/dpt: Make DPT object unshrinkable
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: drm/i915/dpt: Make DPT object unshrinkable In some scenarios, the DPT object gets shrunk but the actual framebuffer did not and thus its still there on the DPT's vm-boundlist. Then it tries to rewrite the PTEs via a stale CPU...