Multiple vulnerabilities have been reported in the Linux Kernel, which can be exploited by malicious, local users to disclose certain system information, cause a DoS (Denial of Service), and gain escalated privileges and by malicious people to potentially compromise a vulnerable system. 1) A race condition within the "scan_get_next_rmap_item()" function in mm/ksm.c and can be exploited to cause a kernel crash. 2) A signedness error when processing the "osf_sysinfo()" system call in arch/alpha/kernel/osf_sys.c can be exploited to disclose the contents of some kernel memory. 3) A signedness error when processing the "osf_getdomainname()" system call in arch/alpha/kernel/osf_sys.c can be exploited to disclose the contents of some kernel memory. 4) An error when processing the "osf_getsysinfo()" system call in arch/alpha/kernel/osf_sys.c can be exploited to disclose the contents of some kernel memory. 5) An error when processing the "osf_wait4()" system call in arch/alpha/kernel/osf_sys.c can be exploited to manipulate kernel memory. **NOTE: The vulnerabilities #2 through #5 affect the Alpha architecture only.** 6) An error within the INET socket monitoring feature when auditing the bytecode contained in certain netlink messages can be exploited to cause the kernel to enter an infinite loop via an INET_DIAG_BC_JMP opcode with the "yes" variable set to "0". 7) An error due to the TASKSTATS netlink interface (kernel/taskstats.c) allowing a process to register multiple listeners for exit statistics, which can be exploited to cause the kernel to consume memory and CPU resources resulting in a DoS. 8) An integer underflow error within the "l2cap_config_req()" function in net/bluetooth/l2cap_core.c when handling a l2cap configuration request can be exploited to cause a buffer overflow. 9) Some errors in net/wireless/nl80211.c when processing SSID strings can be exploited to cause a buffer overflow via an overly long string. Successful exploitation of this vulnerability requires "CAP_NET_ADMIN" capabilities. 10) The "packet_recvmsg()" and "tpacket_rcv()" functions (net/packet/af_packet.c) do not properly initialise a structure before copying it to userspace, which can be exploited to disclose kernel memory. The vulnerabilities are reported in version 2.6.39.1. Other versions may also be affected.
Vulnerabilities #1, #6, and #7 are fixed in version version 2.6.39.3 and 2.6.35.14. Vulnerabilities #2 through #5 and #10 are fixed in version 2.6.35.14
*** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of bug 212137 ***