Bug 2457003 (CVE-2026-34987) - CVE-2026-34987 wasmtime: bytecodealliance/wasmtime: Wasmtime: Arbitrary code execution via incorrect memory offset handling in Winch compiler
Summary: CVE-2026-34987 wasmtime: bytecodealliance/wasmtime: Wasmtime: Arbitrary code ...
Keywords:
Status: NEW
Alias: CVE-2026-34987
Product: Security Response
Classification: Other
Component: vulnerability
Version: unspecified
Hardware: All
OS: Linux
unspecified
unspecified
Target Milestone: ---
Assignee: Product Security
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Depends On:
Blocks:
TreeView+ depends on / blocked
 
Reported: 2026-04-09 19:02 UTC by OSIDB Bzimport
Modified: 2026-04-09 22:39 UTC (History)
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Description OSIDB Bzimport 2026-04-09 19:02:26 UTC
Wasmtime is a runtime for WebAssembly. From 25.0.0 to before 36.0.7, 42.0.2, and 43.0.1, Wasmtime with its Winch (baseline) non-default compiler backend may allow properly constructed guest Wasm to access host memory outside of its linear-memory sandbox. This vulnerability requires use of the Winch compiler (-Ccompiler=winch). By default, Wasmtime uses its Cranelift backend, not Winch. With Winch, the same incorrect assumption is present in theory on both aarch64 and x86-64. The aarch64 case has an observed-working proof of concept, while the x86-64 case is theoretical and may not be reachable in practice. This Winch compiler bug can allow the Wasm guest to access memory before or after the linear-memory region, independently of whether pre- or post-guard regions are configured. The accessible range in the initial bug proof-of-concept is up to 32KiB before the start of memory, or ~4GiB after the start of memory, independently of the size of pre- or post-guard regions or the use of explicit or guard-region-based bounds checking. However, the underlying bug assumes a 32-bit memory offset stored in a 64-bit register has its upper bits cleared when it may not, and so closely related variants of the initial proof-of-concept may be able to access truly arbitrary memory in-process. This could result in a host process segmentation fault (DoS), an arbitrary data leak from the host process, or with a write, potentially an arbitrary RCE. This vulnerability is fixed in 36.0.7, 42.0.2, and 43.0.1.


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