CVE Database
/

CVE-2025-21664

Back to search

CVE-2025-21664

Published: Jan 21, 2025

Modified: May 12, 2026

PUBLISHED

Description

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: dm thin: make get_first_thin use rcu-safe list first function The documentation in rculist.h explains the absence of list_empty_rcu() and cautions programmers against relying on a list_empty() -> list_first() sequence in RCU safe code. This is because each of these functions performs its own READ_ONCE() of the list head. This can lead to a situation where the list_empty() sees a valid list entry, but the subsequent list_first() sees a different view of list head state after a modification. In the case of dm-thin, this author had a production box crash from a GP fault in the process_deferred_bios path. This function saw a valid list head in get_first_thin() but when it subsequently dereferenced that and turned it into a thin_c, it got the inside of the struct pool, since the list was now empty and referring to itself. The kernel on which this occurred printed both a warning about a refcount_t being saturated, and a UBSAN error for an out-of-bounds cpuid access in the queued spinlock, prior to the fault itself. When the resulting kdump was examined, it was possible to see another thread patiently waiting in thin_dtr's synchronize_rcu. The thin_dtr call managed to pull the thin_c out of the active thins list (and have it be the last entry in the active_thins list) at just the wrong moment which lead to this crash. Fortunately, the fix here is straight forward. Switch get_first_thin() function to use list_first_or_null_rcu() which performs just a single READ_ONCE() and returns NULL if the list is already empty. This was run against the devicemapper test suite's thin-provisioning suites for delete and suspend and no regressions were observed.

VendorProductVersions

Linux

Linux

affected
b10ebd34cccae1b431caf1be54919aede2be7cbe - < ec037fe8c0d0f6140e3d8a49c7b29cb5582160b8
affected
b10ebd34cccae1b431caf1be54919aede2be7cbe - < cd30a3960433ec2db94b3689752fa3c5df44d649
affected
b10ebd34cccae1b431caf1be54919aede2be7cbe - < 802666a40c71a23542c43a3f87e3a2d0f4e8fe45
affected
b10ebd34cccae1b431caf1be54919aede2be7cbe - < 12771050b6d059eea096993bf2001da9da9fddff
affected
b10ebd34cccae1b431caf1be54919aede2be7cbe - < 6b305e98de0d225ccebfb225730a9f560d28ecb0

+2 more versions

Linux

Linux

affected
3.15
unaffected
0 - < 3.15
unaffected
5.4.290 - <= 5.4.*
unaffected
5.10.234 - <= 5.10.*
unaffected
5.15.177 - <= 5.15.*

+4 more versions

Security Training

Train your team to recognize and prevent security threats with our comprehensive security awareness program.

Start Training

Vulnerability Scanning

Discover vulnerabilities in your applications and infrastructure before attackers do.

Scan Now