CVE-2022-49765

Summary

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:

net/9p: use a dedicated spinlock for trans_fd

Shamelessly copying the explanation from Tetsuo Handa's suggested patch[1] (slightly reworded): syzbot is reporting inconsistent lock state in p9_req_put()[2], for p9_tag_remove() from p9_req_put() from IRQ context is using spin_lock_irqsave() on "struct p9_client"->lock but trans_fd (not from IRQ context) is using spin_lock().

Since the locks actually protect different things in client.c and in trans_fd.c, just replace trans_fd.c's lock by a new one specific to the transport (client.c's protect the idr for fid/tag allocations, while trans_fd.c's protects its own req list and request status field that acts as the transport's state machine)

Affected Software

VendorProductVersion RangeStatus
LinuxLinux673d62cdaac6ffbce980a349d3174b3929ceb9e5 < 43bbadb7e4636dc02f6a283c2a39e6438e6173cdaffected
LinuxLinux673d62cdaac6ffbce980a349d3174b3929ceb9e5 < 717b9b4f38703d7f5293059e3a242d16f76fa045affected
LinuxLinux673d62cdaac6ffbce980a349d3174b3929ceb9e5 < 296ab4a813841ba1d5f40b03190fd1bd8f25aab0affected
LinuxLinux2.6.28affected
LinuxLinux0 < 2.6.28unaffected
LinuxLinux5.15.80 <= 5.15.*unaffected
LinuxLinux6.0.10 <= 6.0.*unaffected
LinuxLinux6.1 <= *unaffected

Weaknesses

References