USN-7060-1: EDK II vulnerabilities
10 October 2024
Several security issues were fixed in EDK II.
Releases
Packages
- edk2 - UEFI firmware for virtual machines
Details
It was discovered that EDK II did not check the buffer length in XHCI,
which could lead to a stack overflow. A local attacker could potentially
use this issue to cause a denial of service. This issue only affected
Ubuntu 16.04 LTS and Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. (CVE-2019-0161)
Laszlo Ersek discovered that EDK II incorrectly handled recursion. A
remote attacker could possibly use this issue to cause EDK II to consume
resources, leading to a denial of service. This issue only affected
Ubuntu 16.04 LTS and Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. (CVE-2021-28210)
Satoshi Tanda discovered that EDK II incorrectly handled decompressing
certain images. A remote attacker could use this issue to cause EDK II to
crash, resulting in a denial of service, or possibly execute arbitrary
code. This issue only affected Ubuntu 16.04 LTS and Ubuntu 18.04 LTS.
(CVE-2021-28211)
It was discovered that EDK II incorrectly decoded certain strings. A remote
attacker could use this issue to cause EDK II to crash, resulting in a
denial of service, or possibly execute arbitrary code. This issue only
affected Ubuntu 16.04 LTS and Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. (CVE-2021-38575)
It was discovered that EDK II had integer underflow vulnerability in
SmmEntryPoint, which could result in a buffer overflow. An attacker
could potentially use this issue to cause a denial of service.
(CVE-2021-38578)
Elison Niven discovered that OpenSSL, vendored in EDK II, incorrectly
handled the c_rehash script. A local attacker could possibly use this
issue to execute arbitrary commands when c_rehash is run. This issue
only affected Ubuntu 16.04 LTS. (CVE-2022-1292)
Update instructions
The problem can be corrected by updating your system to the following package versions:
Ubuntu 22.04
-
ovmf
-
2022.02-3ubuntu0.22.04.3
-
ovmf-ia32
-
2022.02-3ubuntu0.22.04.3
-
qemu-efi-aarch64
-
2022.02-3ubuntu0.22.04.3
-
qemu-efi-arm
-
2022.02-3ubuntu0.22.04.3
Ubuntu 20.04
-
ovmf
-
0~20191122.bd85bf54-2ubuntu3.6
-
qemu-efi-aarch64
-
0~20191122.bd85bf54-2ubuntu3.6
-
qemu-efi-arm
-
0~20191122.bd85bf54-2ubuntu3.6
Ubuntu 18.04
-
ovmf
-
0~20180205.c0d9813c-2ubuntu0.3+esm2
Available with Ubuntu Pro
-
qemu-efi-aarch64
-
0~20180205.c0d9813c-2ubuntu0.3+esm2
Available with Ubuntu Pro
-
qemu-efi-arm
-
0~20180205.c0d9813c-2ubuntu0.3+esm2
Available with Ubuntu Pro
Ubuntu 16.04
-
ovmf
-
0~20160408.ffea0a2c-2ubuntu0.2+esm3
Available with Ubuntu Pro
-
qemu-efi
-
0~20160408.ffea0a2c-2ubuntu0.2+esm3
Available with Ubuntu Pro
After a standard system update you need to restart the virtual machines
that use the affected firmware to make all the necessary changes.
Related notices
- USN-4923-1: ovmf, qemu-efi-aarch64, qemu-efi-arm, qemu-efi, edk2
- USN-5088-1: ovmf, ovmf-ia32, qemu-efi-aarch64, qemu-efi-arm, qemu-efi, edk2
- USN-5402-1: libssl1.1, libssl1.0-dev, openssl1.0, libssl-doc, libssl-dev, openssl, libssl3, libssl1.0.0
- USN-5402-2: libssl-doc, libssl1.0.0, libssl-dev, openssl
- USN-6457-1: nodejs, nodejs-doc, libnode-dev, libnode72
- USN-7018-1: libssl-doc, libssl1.0.0, libssl-dev, openssl