Christian,
It was Greg who moved this CVE under the kernel.org CNA territory:
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/2025032402-jam-immovable-2d57@gregkh/
This thread was kicked into gear by Salvatore from Debian, who asked whether there was a mainline fix. There wasn’t one upstream, I think, primarily due to your assessment.
Meanwhile, the distros wanted to protect their users and fix that gaping 64k heap buffer overflow with a one-liner boundary check. Canonical did. I believe they wanted to help Debian do the same.
They assigned a CVE -with the ID you are seeing- for Canonical Ubuntu Linux:
https://github.com/CVEProject/cvelist/commit/a56d5efc25a561c94ccf296fceaab2a...
It seems Debian initially dropped the config option altogether — a reasonable decision I personally agree with — but later reverted the change after someone from SuSE pointed out that it’s still required for PowerPC, PPC64, and apparently some Apple hardware: https://salsa.debian.org/kernel-team/linux/-/commit/180f39f01cb9175dc77e8a5e...
Still, I think the distros were just trying to do their jobs. Something that it seems we might both agree on.
On 4/7/25 19:15, Christian Brauner wrote:
On Mon, Apr 07, 2025 at 12:59:18PM +0200, Christian Brauner wrote:
On Sun, Apr 06, 2025 at 07:07:57PM +0300, Cengiz Can wrote:
On 24-03-25 11:53:51, Greg KH wrote:
On Mon, Mar 24, 2025 at 09:43:18PM +0300, Cengiz Can wrote:
In the meantime, can we get this fix applied?
Please work with the filesystem maintainers to do so.
Hello Christian, hello Alexander
Can you help us with this?
Thanks in advance!
Filesystem bugs due to corrupt images are not considered a CVE for any filesystem that is only mountable by CAP_SYS_ADMIN in the initial user namespace. That includes delegated mounting.
Now, quoting from [1]:
"So, for the record, the Linux kernel in general only allows mounts for those with CAP_SYS_ADMIN, however, it is true that desktop and even server environments allow regular non-privileged users to mount and automount filesystems.
In particular, both the latest Ubuntu Desktop and Server versions come with default polkit rules that allow users with an active local session to create loop devices and mount a range of block filesystems commonly found on USB flash drives with udisks2. Inspecting /usr/share/polkit-1/actions/org.freedesktop.UDisks2.policy shows:"
So what this saying is:
A distribution is shipping tooling that allows unprivileged users to mount arbitrary filesystems including hpfsplus. Or to rephrase this: A distribution is allowing unprivileged users to mount orphaned filesystems. Congratulations on the brave decision to play Russian Roulette with a fully-loaded gun.
The VFS doesn't allow mounting arbitrary filesystems by unprivileged users. Every FS_REQUIRES_DEV filesystem requires global CAP_SYS_ADMIN privileged at which point you can also do sudo rm -rf --no-preserve-root / or a million other destructive things.
The blogpost is aware that the VFS maintainers don't accept CVEs like this. Yet a CVE was still filed against the upstream kernel. IOW, someone abused the fact that a distro chose to allow mounting arbitrary filesystems including orphaned ones by unprivileged user as an argument to gain a kernel CVE.
Revoke that CVE against the upstream kernel. This is a CVE against a distro. There's zero reason for us to hurry with any fix.
Before that gets misinterpreted: This is not intended to either implicitly or explicitly imply that patch pickup is dependend on the revocation of this CVE.
Since this isn't a valid CVE there's no reason to hurry-up merging this into mainline within the next 24 hours. It'll get there whenever the next fixes pr is ready.