ISSUE DESCRIPTION ================= XSA-77 put the majority of the domctl operations on a list excepting them from having security advisories issued for them if any effects their use might have could hamper security. Subsequently some of them got declared disaggregation safe, but for a small subset this was not really correct: Their (mis-)use may result in host lockups. As a result, the potential security benefits of toolstack disaggregation are not always fully realised. IMPACT ====== Domains deliberately given partial management control may be able to deny service to the entire host. As a result, in a system designed to enhance security by radically disaggregating the management, the security may be reduced. But, the security will be no worse than a non-disaggregated design. VULNERABLE SYSTEMS ================== Xen versions 4.3 onwards are vulnerable. Xen versions 4.2 and earlier do not have the described disaggregation functionality and hence are not vulnerable. MITIGATION ========== The issues discussed in this advisory are themselves bugs in features used for a security risk mitigation. There is no further mitigation available, beyond general measures to try to avoid parts of the system management becoming controlled by attackers. Those are the kind of measures which we expect any users of radical disaggregation to have already deployed. Switching from disaggregated to a non-disaggregated operation does NOT mitigate these vulnerabilities. Rather, it simply recategorises the vulnerability to hostile management code, regarding it "as designed"; thus it merely reclassifies these issues as "not a bug". Users and vendors of disaggregated systems should not change their configuration. The robustness benefits of disaggregation are unaffected, and (depending on system design) security benefits are likely to remain despite the vulnerabilities. RESOLUTION ========== Applying the appropriate attached patch resolves this issue.
Created attachment 1003869 [details] xsa127.patch
Created attachment 1003870 [details] xsa127.patch
Statement: Not vulnerable. This issue does not affect the kernel-xen packages as shipped with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.
Created xen tracking bugs for this issue: Affects: fedora-all [bug 1207739]
References: http://www.openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2015/03/31/6
Acknowledgements: Red Hat would like to thank the Xen for reporting this issue.