CVE-2022-49648
Published: Feb 26, 2025
Modified: May 23, 2026
Description
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: tracing/histograms: Fix memory leak problem This reverts commit 46bbe5c671e06f070428b9be142cc4ee5cedebac. As commit 46bbe5c671e0 ("tracing: fix double free") said, the "double free" problem reported by clang static analyzer is: > In parse_var_defs() if there is a problem allocating > var_defs.expr, the earlier var_defs.name is freed. > This free is duplicated by free_var_defs() which frees > the rest of the list. However, if there is a problem allocating N-th var_defs.expr: + in parse_var_defs(), the freed 'earlier var_defs.name' is actually the N-th var_defs.name; + then in free_var_defs(), the names from 0th to (N-1)-th are freed; IF ALLOCATING PROBLEM HAPPENED HERE!!! -+ \ | 0th 1th (N-1)-th N-th V +-------------+-------------+-----+-------------+----------- var_defs: | name | expr | name | expr | ... | name | expr | name | /// +-------------+-------------+-----+-------------+----------- These two frees don't act on same name, so there was no "double free" problem before. Conversely, after that commit, we get a "memory leak" problem because the above "N-th var_defs.name" is not freed. If enable CONFIG_DEBUG_KMEMLEAK and inject a fault at where the N-th var_defs.expr allocated, then execute on shell like: $ echo 'hist:key=call_site:val=$v1,$v2:v1=bytes_req,v2=bytes_alloc' > \ /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/events/kmem/kmalloc/trigger Then kmemleak reports: unreferenced object 0xffff8fb100ef3518 (size 8): comm "bash", pid 196, jiffies 4295681690 (age 28.538s) hex dump (first 8 bytes): 76 31 00 00 b1 8f ff ff v1...... backtrace: [<0000000038fe4895>] kstrdup+0x2d/0x60 [<00000000c99c049a>] event_hist_trigger_parse+0x206f/0x20e0 [<00000000ae70d2cc>] trigger_process_regex+0xc0/0x110 [<0000000066737a4c>] event_trigger_write+0x75/0xd0 [<000000007341e40c>] vfs_write+0xbb/0x2a0 [<0000000087fde4c2>] ksys_write+0x59/0xd0 [<00000000581e9cdf>] do_syscall_64+0x3a/0x80 [<00000000cf3b065c>] entry_SYSCALL_64_after_hwframe+0x46/0xb0
| Vendor | Product | Versions |
|---|---|---|
Linux | Linux | affected 240dd5118a9e0454f280ffeae63f22bd14735733 - < eb622d5580b9e2ff694f62da6410618bd73853cbaffected e92c490f104993cea35e5f5d5108ac12df1850ac - < ecc6dec12c33aa92c086cd702af9f544ddaf3c75affected 46bbe5c671e06f070428b9be142cc4ee5cedebac - < 78a1400c42ee11197eb1f0f85ba51df9a4fdfff0affected 46bbe5c671e06f070428b9be142cc4ee5cedebac - < 22eeff55679d9e7c0f768c79bfbd83e2f8142d89affected 46bbe5c671e06f070428b9be142cc4ee5cedebac - < 4d453eb5e1eec89971aa5b3262857ee26cfdffd3+5 more versions |
Linux | Linux | affected 5.9unaffected 0 - < 5.9unaffected 4.19.253 - <= 4.19.*unaffected 5.4.207 - <= 5.4.*unaffected 5.10.132 - <= 5.10.*+3 more versions |
References
Security Training
Train your team to recognize and prevent security threats with our comprehensive security awareness program.
Start TrainingVulnerability Scanning
Discover vulnerabilities in your applications and infrastructure before attackers do.
Scan Now