- Issued:
- 2009-02-04
- Updated:
- 2009-02-04
RHSA-2009:0053 - Important: kernel-rt security and bug fix update
Synopsis
Important: kernel-rt security and bug fix update
Type/Severity
Security Advisory Important
Topic
Updated kernel packages that fix several security issues and several bugs are now available for Red Hat Enterprise MRG 1.1.
This update has been rated as having important security impact by the Red Hat Security Response Team.
Description
The kernel packages contain the Linux kernel, the core of any Linux operating system.
These updated packages address the following security issues:
-
a flaw was found in the Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) subsystem. A local, unprivileged user could use the flaw to listen on the same socket more than once, possibly causing a denial of service. (CVE-2008-5079, Important)
-
a buffer overflow flaw was found in the libertas driver. This could, potentially, lead to a remote denial of service when an invalid beacon or probe response was received. (CVE-2008-5134, Important)
-
a race condition was found in the Linux kernel "inotify" watch removal and umount implementation. This could allow a local, unprivileged user
to cause a privilege escalation or a denial of service. (CVE-2008-5182,
Important) -
the sendmsg() function in the Linux kernel did not block during UNIX socket garbage collection. This could, potentially, lead to a local denial of service. (CVE-2008-5300, Important)
-
a buffer overflow was found in the Linux kernel Partial Reliable Stream Control Transmission Protocol (PR-SCTP) implementation. This could, potentially, lead to a denial of service if a Forward-TSN chunk is received with a large stream ID. (CVE-2009-0065, Important)
-
a deficiency was found in the libATA implementation. This could, potentially, lead to a denial of service. By default, the "/dev/sg*" devices are accessible only to the root user. (CVE-2008-5700, Low)
These updated packages also address numerous bugs, including the following:
-
a race condition caused the timer to stop responding. This was fixed by correcting the behavior of the alloc_posix_timer() function.
-
the kernel was behaving differently for varying file capabilities. This was resolved by ensuring the get_file_caps() function was preceded by clearing bprm->caps_*.
-
a check was included on the limit of the shadow.bytes array, to prevent value outside the limits being written and over riding other data areas.
-
the kernel-rt-2.6.24.7-81.el5rt kernel displayed a warning on boot stating that the hwclock failed. This was due to a compatibility problem with the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 file system. It was resolved by adding a new udev rule that ensured /dev was set up correctly.
-
the GPS clock daemon was becoming unstable due to a problem in adjtimex. The issue was located and corrected.
-
the events_trace tracer was providing bad parameters to syscalls on i386 machines. This was due to the sys_call interface needing to use the assembly linked annotation and the edx register being used before it was stored on the stack. Both these issues were corrected.
All Red Hat Enterprise MRG users should install this update which addresses these vulnerabilities and fixes these bugs. For this update to take effect, the system must be rebooted.
Solution
Before applying this update, make sure that all previously-released errata relevant to your system have been applied.
This update is available via Red Hat Network. Details on how to use the Red Hat Network to apply this update are available at This content is not included.http://kbase.redhat.com/faq/docs/DOC-11259
Affected Products
| Product | Version | Arch |
|---|---|---|
| MRG Realtime | 1 | x86_64 |
| MRG Realtime | 1 | i386 |
Updated Packages
- kernel-rt-vanilla-devel-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.i686.rpm
- kernel-rt-vanilla-devel-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.x86_64.rpm
- kernel-rt-vanilla-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.x86_64.rpm
- kernel-rt-debug-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.i686.rpm
- kernel-rt-vanilla-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.i686.rpm
- kernel-rt-debug-devel-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.x86_64.rpm
- kernel-rt-debug-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.x86_64.rpm
- kernel-rt-trace-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.x86_64.rpm
- kernel-rt-devel-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.x86_64.rpm
- kernel-rt-debug-devel-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.i686.rpm
- kernel-rt-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.i686.rpm
- kernel-rt-devel-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.i686.rpm
- kernel-rt-trace-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.i686.rpm
- kernel-rt-trace-devel-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.x86_64.rpm
- kernel-rt-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.x86_64.rpm
- kernel-rt-doc-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.noarch.rpm
- kernel-rt-trace-devel-2.6.24.7-101.el5rt.i686.rpm
Fixes
- This content is not included.BZ - 472325
- This content is not included.BZ - 473259
- This content is not included.BZ - 473696
- This content is not included.BZ - 470758
- This content is not included.BZ - 470761
- This content is not included.BZ - 471835
- This content is not included.BZ - 478800
- This content is not included.BZ - 474495
- This content is not included.BZ - 472277
- This content is not included.BZ - 474683
CVEs
References
- http://www.redhat.com/security/updates/classification/#important
- This content is not included.This content is not included.http://www.redhat.com/docs/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_MRG/1.1/html/MRG_Release_Notes/
Additional information
- The Red Hat security contact is This content is not included.secalert@redhat.com. More contact details at https://access.redhat.com/security/team/contact/.
- Offline Security Data data is available for integration with other systems. See Offline Security Data API to get started.