Overview
About vulnerability
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:
net: ch9200: fix uninitialised access during mii_nway_restart
In mii_nway_restart() the code attempts to call mii->mdio_read which is ch9200_mdio_read(). ch9200_mdio_read() utilises a local buffer called “buff”, which is initialised with control_read(). However “buff” is conditionally initialised inside control_read():
if (err == size) { memcpy(data, buf, size); }
If the condition of “err == size” is not met, then “buff” remains uninitialised. Once this happens the uninitialised “buff” is accessed and returned during ch9200_mdio_read():
return (buff[0] | buff[1] « 8);
The problem stems from the fact that ch9200_mdio_read() ignores the return value of control_read(), leading to uinit-access of “buff”.
To fix this we should check the return value of control_read() and return early on error.
Details
- Affected product:
- AlmaLinux 9.2 ESU , CentOS 8.4 ELS , CentOS 8.5 ELS , CentOS Stream 8 ELS , Oracle Linux 7 ELS , TuxCare 9.6 ESU , Ubuntu 16.04 ELS , Ubuntu 18.04 ELS , Ubuntu 20.04 ELS
- Affected packages:
- linux-hwe @ 4.15.0 (+9 more)
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:
net: ch9200: fix uninitialised access during mii_nway_restart
In mii_nway_restart() the code attempts to call mii->mdio_read which is ch9200_mdio_read(). ch9200_mdio_read() utilises a local buffer called “buff”, which is initialised with control_read(). However “buff” is conditionally initialised inside control_read():
if (err == size) { memcpy(data, buf, size); }
If the condition of “err == size” is not met, then “buff” remains uninitialised. Once this happens the uninitialised “buff” is accessed and returned during ch9200_mdio_read():
return (buff[0] | buff[1] « 8);
The problem stems from the fact that ch9200_mdio_read() ignores the return value of control_read(), leading to uinit-access of “buff”.
To fix this we should check the return value of control_read() and return early on error.