CVE-2026-53061

Summary

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

dm cache: fix dirty mapping checking in passthrough mode switching

As mentioned in commit 9b1cc9f251af ("dm cache: share cache-metadata object across inactive and active DM tables"), dm-cache assumed table reload occurs after suspension, while LVM's table preload breaks this assumption. The dirty mapping check for passthrough mode was designed around this assumption and is performed during table creation, causing the check to fail with preload while metadata updates are ongoing. This risks loading dirty mappings into passthrough mode, resulting in data loss.

Reproduce steps:

  1. Create a writeback cache with zero migration_threshold to produce dirty mappings

dmsetup create cmeta –table "0 8192 linear /dev/sdc 0" dmsetup create cdata –table "0 131072 linear /dev/sdc 8192" dmsetup create corig –table "0 262144 linear /dev/sdc 262144" dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/mapper/cmeta bs=4k count=1 oflag=direct dmsetup create cache –table "0 262144 cache /dev/mapper/cmeta
/dev/mapper/cdata /dev/mapper/corig 128 2 metadata2 writeback smq
2 migration_threshold 0"

  1. Preload a table in passthrough mode

dmsetup reload cache –table "0 262144 cache /dev/mapper/cmeta
/dev/mapper/cdata /dev/mapper/corig 128 2 metadata2 passthrough smq 0"

  1. Write to the first cache block to make it dirty

fio –filename=/dev/mapper/cache –name=populate –rw=write –bs=4k
–direct=1 –size=64k

  1. Resume the inactive table. Now it's possible to load the dirty block into passthrough mode.

dmsetup resume cache

Fix by moving the checks to the preresume phase to support table preloading. Also remove the unused function dm_cache_metadata_all_clean.

Affected Software

VendorProductVersion RangeStatus
LinuxLinux2ee57d587357f0d752af6c2e3e46434a74b1bee3 < c2e86f647561fcf5e1c6eba7d75e9e0c4299c94daffected
LinuxLinux2ee57d587357f0d752af6c2e3e46434a74b1bee3 < 5c98a3f1d7a554c9e920aa31daf92af6b5bbb8ccaffected
LinuxLinux2ee57d587357f0d752af6c2e3e46434a74b1bee3 < 1443c32f24d6d8bcdf4beceef2afc09290b98717affected
LinuxLinux2ee57d587357f0d752af6c2e3e46434a74b1bee3 < 12105c7f18375d7615dad7605d89eadae7eb12a6affected
LinuxLinux2ee57d587357f0d752af6c2e3e46434a74b1bee3 < bd5a2c1018938e6b32670728bdb32a3f0efff00faffected
LinuxLinux2ee57d587357f0d752af6c2e3e46434a74b1bee3 < 21c503d60a257e54ca3ac58e2721bd24501d5bdeaffected
LinuxLinux2ee57d587357f0d752af6c2e3e46434a74b1bee3 < 01b22656d8a68dbeae59f8b80866e7b11936b20aaffected
LinuxLinux2ee57d587357f0d752af6c2e3e46434a74b1bee3 < 322586745bd1a0e5f3559fd1635fdeb4dbd1d6b8affected
LinuxLinux3.13affected
LinuxLinux0 < 3.13unaffected
LinuxLinux5.10.258 <= 5.10.*unaffected
LinuxLinux5.15.209 <= 5.15.*unaffected
LinuxLinux6.1.175 <= 6.1.*unaffected
LinuxLinux6.6.141 <= 6.6.*unaffected
LinuxLinux6.12.91 <= 6.12.*unaffected
LinuxLinux6.18.33 <= 6.18.*unaffected
LinuxLinux7.0.10 <= 7.0.*unaffected
LinuxLinux7.1 <= *unaffected

Weaknesses

References