In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: ipv4,
ipv6: Fix handling of transhdrlen in __ip{,6}_append_data() Including the
transhdrlen in length is a problem when the packet is partially filled
(e.g. something like send(MSG_MORE) happened previously) when appending to
an IPv4 or IPv6 packet as we don’t want to repeat the transport header or
account for it twice. This can happen under some circumstances, such as
splicing into an L2TP socket. The symptom observed is a warning in
__ip6_append_data(): WARNING: CPU: 1 PID: 5042 at
net/ipv6/ip6_output.c:1800 __ip6_append_data.isra.0+0x1be8/0x47f0
net/ipv6/ip6_output.c:1800 that occurs when MSG_SPLICE_PAGES is used to
append more data to an already partially occupied skbuff. The warning
occurs when ‘copy’ is larger than the amount of data in the message
iterator. This is because the requested length includes the transport
header length when it shouldn’t. This can be triggered by, for example: sfd
= socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_DGRAM, IPPROTO_L2TP); bind(sfd, …); // ::1
connect(sfd, …); // ::1 port 7 send(sfd, buffer, 4100, MSG_MORE);
sendfile(sfd, dfd, NULL, 1024); Fix this by only adding transhdrlen into
the length if the write queue is empty in l2tp_ip6_sendmsg(), analogously
to how UDP does things. l2tp_ip_sendmsg() looks like it won’t suffer from
this problem as it builds the UDP packet itself.
OS | Version | Architecture | Package | Version | Filename |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ubuntu | 20.04 | noarch | linux | < any | UNKNOWN |
ubuntu | 22.04 | noarch | linux | < any | UNKNOWN |
ubuntu | 20.04 | noarch | linux-aws | < any | UNKNOWN |
ubuntu | 22.04 | noarch | linux-aws | < any | UNKNOWN |
ubuntu | 20.04 | noarch | linux-aws-5.15 | < any | UNKNOWN |
ubuntu | 18.04 | noarch | linux-aws-5.4 | < any | UNKNOWN |
ubuntu | 22.04 | noarch | linux-aws-6.5 | < any | UNKNOWN |
ubuntu | 20.04 | noarch | linux-azure | < any | UNKNOWN |
ubuntu | 22.04 | noarch | linux-azure | < any | UNKNOWN |
ubuntu | 20.04 | noarch | linux-azure-5.15 | < any | UNKNOWN |