CVE-2024-47674
Published: Oct 15, 2024
Modified: May 11, 2026
Description
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: mm: avoid leaving partial pfn mappings around in error case As Jann points out, PFN mappings are special, because unlike normal memory mappings, there is no lifetime information associated with the mapping - it is just a raw mapping of PFNs with no reference counting of a 'struct page'. That's all very much intentional, but it does mean that it's easy to mess up the cleanup in case of errors. Yes, a failed mmap() will always eventually clean up any partial mappings, but without any explicit lifetime in the page table mapping itself, it's very easy to do the error handling in the wrong order. In particular, it's easy to mistakenly free the physical backing store before the page tables are actually cleaned up and (temporarily) have stale dangling PTE entries. To make this situation less error-prone, just make sure that any partial pfn mapping is torn down early, before any other error handling.
| Vendor | Product | Versions |
|---|---|---|
Linux | Linux | affected b97a50adb37e98b940a30c4656565ff609aa8f94 - < 3213fdcab961026203dd587a4533600c70b3336baffected 69d4e1ce9087c8767f2fe9b9426fa2755c8e9072 - < 35770ca6180caa24a2b258c99a87bd437a1ee10faffected 74ffa5a3e68504dd289135b1cf0422c19ffb3f2e - < 5b2c8b34f6d76bfbd1dd4936eb8a0fbfb9af3959affected 74ffa5a3e68504dd289135b1cf0422c19ffb3f2e - < 65d0db500d7c07f0f76fc24a4d837791c4862cd2affected 74ffa5a3e68504dd289135b1cf0422c19ffb3f2e - < a95a24fcaee1b892e47d5e6dcc403f713874ee80+2 more versions |
Linux | Linux | affected 5.13unaffected 0 - < 5.13unaffected 5.15.168 - <= 5.15.*unaffected 6.1.111 - <= 6.1.*unaffected 6.6.52 - <= 6.6.*+2 more versions |
References
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