what you don't know can hurt you
Home Files News &[SERVICES_TAB]About Contact Add New

Technical Information On Vulnerabilities Of Hypercall Handlers

Technical Information On Vulnerabilities Of Hypercall Handlers
Posted Sep 23, 2014
Authored by Samuel Kounev, Bryan D. Payne, Aleksandar Milenkoski, Nuno Antunes, Marco Vieira | Site research.spec.org

Modern virtualized service infrastructures expose attack vectors that enable attacks of high severity, such as attacks targeting hypervisors. A malicious user of a guest VM (virtual machine) may execute an attack against the underlying hypervisor via hypercalls, which are software traps from a kernel of a fully or partially paravirtualized guest VM to the hypervisor. The exploitation of a vulnerability of a hypercall handler may have severe consequences such as altering hypervisor's memory, which may result in the execution of malicious code with hypervisor privilege. Despite the importance of vulnerabilities of hypercall handlers, there is not much publicly available information on them. This significantly hinders advances towards securing hypercall interfaces. In this work, the researchers provide in-depth technical information on publicly disclosed vulnerabilities of hypercall handlers. Our vulnerability analysis is based on reverse engineering the released patches fixing the considered vulnerabilities. For each analyzed vulnerability, they provide background information essential for understanding the vulnerability, and information on the vulnerable hypercall handler and the error causing the vulnerability. The researchers also show how the vulnerability can be triggered and discuss the state of the targeted hypervisor after the vulnerability has been triggered.

tags | paper, kernel, vulnerability
advisories | CVE-2012-3494, CVE-2012-3495, CVE-2012-3496, CVE-2012-4539, CVE-2012-5510, CVE-2012-5513, CVE-2012-5525, CVE-2013-1964
SHA-256 | 7d90e4303005df5faec215e49bc919db7d1f13c6388d0b7871bb45c646e2e92a
Login or Register to add favorites

File Archive:

November 2024

  • Su
  • Mo
  • Tu
  • We
  • Th
  • Fr
  • Sa
  • 1
    Nov 1st
    30 Files
  • 2
    Nov 2nd
    0 Files
  • 3
    Nov 3rd
    0 Files
  • 4
    Nov 4th
    12 Files
  • 5
    Nov 5th
    44 Files
  • 6
    Nov 6th
    18 Files
  • 7
    Nov 7th
    9 Files
  • 8
    Nov 8th
    8 Files
  • 9
    Nov 9th
    3 Files
  • 10
    Nov 10th
    0 Files
  • 11
    Nov 11th
    0 Files
  • 12
    Nov 12th
    0 Files
  • 13
    Nov 13th
    0 Files
  • 14
    Nov 14th
    0 Files
  • 15
    Nov 15th
    0 Files
  • 16
    Nov 16th
    0 Files
  • 17
    Nov 17th
    0 Files
  • 18
    Nov 18th
    0 Files
  • 19
    Nov 19th
    0 Files
  • 20
    Nov 20th
    0 Files
  • 21
    Nov 21st
    0 Files
  • 22
    Nov 22nd
    0 Files
  • 23
    Nov 23rd
    0 Files
  • 24
    Nov 24th
    0 Files
  • 25
    Nov 25th
    0 Files
  • 26
    Nov 26th
    0 Files
  • 27
    Nov 27th
    0 Files
  • 28
    Nov 28th
    0 Files
  • 29
    Nov 29th
    0 Files
  • 30
    Nov 30th
    0 Files

Top Authors In Last 30 Days

File Tags

Systems

packet storm

© 2024 Packet Storm. All rights reserved.

Services
Security Services
Hosting By
Rokasec
close