Skip to navigation Skip to main content

Utilities

  • Subscriptions
  • Downloads
  • Red Hat Console
  • Get Support
Red Hat Customer Portal
  • Subscriptions
  • Downloads
  • Red Hat Console
  • Get Support
  • Products

    Top Products

    • Red Hat Enterprise Linux
    • Red Hat OpenShift
    • Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform
    All Products

    Downloads and Containers

    • Downloads
    • Packages
    • Containers

    Top Resources

    • Documentation
    • Product Life Cycles
    • Product Compliance
    • Errata
  • Knowledge

    Red Hat Knowledge Center

    • Knowledgebase Solutions
    • Knowledgebase Articles
    • Customer Portal Labs
    • Errata

    Top Product Docs

    • Red Hat Enterprise Linux
    • Red Hat OpenShift
    • Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform
    All Product Docs

    Training and Certification

    • About
    • Course Index
    • Certification Index
    • Skill Assessment
  • Security

    Red Hat Product Security Center

    • Security Updates
    • Security Advisories
    • Red Hat CVE Database
    • Errata

    References

    • Security Bulletins
    • Security Measurement
    • Severity Ratings
    • Security Data

    Top Resources

    • Security Labs
    • Backporting Policies
    • Security Blog
  • Support

    Red Hat Support

    • Support Cases
    • Troubleshoot
    • Get Support
    • Contact Red Hat Support

    Red Hat Community Support

    • Customer Portal Community
    • Community Discussions
    • Red Hat Accelerator Program

    Top Resources

    • Product Life Cycles
    • Customer Portal Labs
    • Red Hat JBoss Supported Configurations
    • Red Hat Insights
Or troubleshoot an issue.

Select Your Language

  • English
  • Français
  • 한국어
  • 日本語
  • 中文 (中国)

Infrastructure and Management

  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux
  • Red Hat Satellite
  • Red Hat Subscription Management
  • Red Hat Insights
  • Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform

Cloud Computing

  • Red Hat OpenShift
  • Red Hat OpenStack Platform
  • Red Hat OpenShift
  • Red Hat OpenShift AI
  • Red Hat OpenShift Dedicated
  • Red Hat Advanced Cluster Security for Kubernetes
  • Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management for Kubernetes
  • Red Hat Quay
  • Red Hat OpenShift Dev Spaces
  • Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS

Storage

  • Red Hat Gluster Storage
  • Red Hat Hyperconverged Infrastructure
  • Red Hat Ceph Storage
  • Red Hat OpenShift Data Foundation

Runtimes

  • Red Hat Runtimes
  • Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform
  • Red Hat Data Grid
  • Red Hat JBoss Web Server
  • Red Hat build of Keycloak
  • Red Hat support for Spring Boot
  • Red Hat build of Node.js
  • Red Hat build of Quarkus

Integration and Automation

  • Red Hat Application Foundations
  • Red Hat Fuse
  • Red Hat AMQ
  • Red Hat 3scale API Management
All Products
Red Hat Product Errata RHSA-2010:0998 - Security Advisory
Issued:
2010-12-20
Updated:
2010-12-20

RHSA-2010:0998 - Security Advisory

  • Overview
  • Updated Packages

Synopsis

Low: kvm security and bug fix update

Type/Severity

Security Advisory: Low

Red Hat Insights patch analysis

Identify and remediate systems affected by this advisory.

View affected systems

Topic

Updated kvm packages that fix one security issue and three bugs are now
available for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.

The Red Hat Security Response Team has rated this update as having low
security impact. A Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) base score,
which gives a detailed severity rating, is available from the CVE link in
the References section.

Description

KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for
Linux on AMD64 and Intel 64 systems. KVM is a Linux kernel module built for
the standard Red Hat Enterprise Linux kernel.

It was found that some structure padding and reserved fields in certain
data structures in QEMU-KVM were not initialized properly before being
copied to user-space. A privileged host user with access to "/dev/kvm"
could use this flaw to leak kernel stack memory to user-space.
(CVE-2010-3881)

Red Hat would like to thank Vasiliy Kulikov for reporting this issue.

This update also fixes the following bugs:

  • The 'kvm_amd' kernel module did not initialize the TSC (Time Stamp

Counter) offset in the VMCB (Virtual Machine Control Block) correctly.
After a vCPU (virtual CPU) has been created, the TSC offset in the VMCB
should have a negative value so that the virtual machine will see TSC
values starting at zero. However, the TSC offset was set to zero and
therefore the virtual machine saw the same TSC value as the host. With this
update, the TSC offset has been updated to show the correct values.
(BZ#656984)

  • Setting the boot settings of a virtual machine to, firstly, boot from PXE

and, secondly, to boot from the hard drive would result in a PXE boot loop,
that is, the virtual machine would not continue to boot from the hard drive
if the PXE boot failed. This was caused by a flaw in the 'bochs-bios' (part
of KVM) code. With this update, after a virtual machine tries to boot from
PXE and fails, it continues to boot from a hard drive if there is one
present. (BZ#659850)

  • If a 64-bit Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 virtual machine was migrated to

another host with a different CPU clock speed, the clock of that virtual
machine would consistently lose or gain time (approximately half a second
for every second the host is running). On machines that do not use the kvm
clock, the network time protocol daemon (ntpd) could correct the time
drifts caused by migration. However, using the pvclock caused the time to
change consistently. This was due to flaws in the save/load functions of
pvclock. With this update, the issue has been fixed and migrating a virtual
machine no longer causes time drift. (BZ#660239)

All KVM users should upgrade to these updated packages, which contain
backported patches to correct these issues. Note: The procedure in the
Solution section must be performed before this update will take effect.

Solution

Before applying this update, make sure all previously-released errata
relevant to your system have been applied.

This update is available via the Red Hat Network. Details on how to
use the Red Hat Network to apply this update are available at
http://kbase.redhat.com/faq/docs/DOC-11259

The following procedure must be performed before this update will take
effect:

1) Stop all KVM guest virtual machines.

2) Either reboot the hypervisor machine or, as the root user, remove (using
"modprobe -r [module]") and reload (using "modprobe [module]") all of the
following modules which are currently running (determined using "lsmod"):
kvm, ksm, kvm-intel or kvm-amd.

3) Restart the KVM guest virtual machines.

Affected Products

  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server 5 x86_64
  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux Workstation 5 x86_64

Fixes

  • BZ - 649920 - CVE-2010-3881 kvm: arch/x86/kvm/x86.c: reading uninitialized stack memory
  • BZ - 656984 - TSC offset of virtual machines is not initialized correctly by 'kvm_amd' kernel module.
  • BZ - 659850 - If VM boot seq. is set up as nc (PXE then disk) the VM is always stuck on trying to PXE boot
  • BZ - 660239 - clock drift when migrating a guest between mis-matched CPU clock speed

CVEs

  • CVE-2010-3881

References

  • https://access.redhat.com/security/updates/classification/#low
Note: More recent versions of these packages may be available. Click a package name for more details.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server 5

SRPM
kvm-83-164.el5_5.30.src.rpm SHA-256: fd389b1151deaefb25d5a6c0bc3a1459ea664484cd300dd96e4f0aeabf634803
x86_64
kmod-kvm-83-164.el5_5.30.x86_64.rpm SHA-256: fec2abcaa1db52886fe8ac46f613d4cb7d1f089d7907c910cb4f12271222518a
kvm-83-164.el5_5.30.x86_64.rpm SHA-256: 774001a57203e73bc12576bdd7185f77c2d6749b0efb0fc25daef9c3ccb7452c
kvm-qemu-img-83-164.el5_5.30.x86_64.rpm SHA-256: 6e03d52d5e9c8ae0c0ba4e017c343bf13b8c6cbeb42e21bc2eca52416569c0bc
kvm-tools-83-164.el5_5.30.x86_64.rpm SHA-256: 4832a9587737f5f1361e5a9d40d573f0cb06f97fd8422d63015ad6b0459b5f29

Red Hat Enterprise Linux Workstation 5

SRPM
kvm-83-164.el5_5.30.src.rpm SHA-256: fd389b1151deaefb25d5a6c0bc3a1459ea664484cd300dd96e4f0aeabf634803
x86_64
kmod-kvm-83-164.el5_5.30.x86_64.rpm SHA-256: fec2abcaa1db52886fe8ac46f613d4cb7d1f089d7907c910cb4f12271222518a
kvm-83-164.el5_5.30.x86_64.rpm SHA-256: 774001a57203e73bc12576bdd7185f77c2d6749b0efb0fc25daef9c3ccb7452c
kvm-qemu-img-83-164.el5_5.30.x86_64.rpm SHA-256: 6e03d52d5e9c8ae0c0ba4e017c343bf13b8c6cbeb42e21bc2eca52416569c0bc
kvm-tools-83-164.el5_5.30.x86_64.rpm SHA-256: 4832a9587737f5f1361e5a9d40d573f0cb06f97fd8422d63015ad6b0459b5f29

The Red Hat security contact is secalert@redhat.com. More contact details at https://access.redhat.com/security/team/contact/.

Red Hat LinkedIn YouTube Facebook X, formerly Twitter

Quick Links

  • Downloads
  • Subscriptions
  • Support Cases
  • Customer Service
  • Product Documentation

Help

  • Contact Us
  • Customer Portal FAQ
  • Log-in Assistance

Site Info

  • Trust Red Hat
  • Browser Support Policy
  • Accessibility
  • Awards and Recognition
  • Colophon

Related Sites

  • redhat.com
  • developers.redhat.com
  • connect.redhat.com
  • cloud.redhat.com

Red Hat legal and privacy links

  • About Red Hat
  • Jobs
  • Events
  • Locations
  • Contact Red Hat
  • Red Hat Blog
  • Inclusion at Red Hat
  • Cool Stuff Store
  • Red Hat Summit
© 2025 Red Hat

Red Hat legal and privacy links

  • Privacy statement
  • Terms of use
  • All policies and guidelines
  • Digital accessibility