Advisory Published
Updated

CVE-2025-37865: net: dsa: mv88e6xxx: fix -ENOENT when deleting VLANs and MST is unsupported

First published: Fri May 09 2025(Updated: )

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: net: dsa: mv88e6xxx: fix -ENOENT when deleting VLANs and MST is unsupported Russell King reports that on the ZII dev rev B, deleting a bridge VLAN from a user port fails with -ENOENT: https://lore.kernel.org/netdev/Z_lQXNP0s5-IiJzd@shell.armlinux.org.uk/ This comes from mv88e6xxx_port_vlan_leave() -> mv88e6xxx_mst_put(), which tries to find an MST entry in &chip->msts associated with the SID, but fails and returns -ENOENT as such. But we know that this chip does not support MST at all, so that is not surprising. The question is why does the guard in mv88e6xxx_mst_put() not exit early: if (!sid) return 0; And the answer seems to be simple: the sid comes from vlan.sid which supposedly was previously populated by mv88e6xxx_vtu_get(). But some chip->info->ops->vtu_getnext() implementations do not populate vlan.sid, for example see mv88e6185_g1_vtu_getnext(). In that case, later in mv88e6xxx_port_vlan_leave() we are using a garbage sid which is just residual stack memory. Testing for sid == 0 covers all cases of a non-bridge VLAN or a bridge VLAN mapped to the default MSTI. For some chips, SID 0 is valid and installed by mv88e6xxx_stu_setup(). A chip which does not support the STU would implicitly only support mapping all VLANs to the default MSTI, so although SID 0 is not valid, it would be sufficient, if we were to zero-initialize the vlan structure, to fix the bug, due to the coincidence that a test for vlan.sid == 0 already exists and leads to the same (correct) behavior. Another option which would be sufficient would be to add a test for mv88e6xxx_has_stu() inside mv88e6xxx_mst_put(), symmetric to the one which already exists in mv88e6xxx_mst_get(). But that placement means the caller will have to dereference vlan.sid, which means it will access uninitialized memory, which is not nice even if it ignores it later. So we end up making both modifications, in order to not rely just on the sid == 0 coincidence, but also to avoid having uninitialized structure fields which might get temporarily accessed.

Credit: 416baaa9-dc9f-4396-8d5f-8c081fb06d67

Affected SoftwareAffected VersionHow to fix
Linux kernel

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Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is the severity of CVE-2025-37865?

    CVE-2025-37865 has a moderate severity rating due to its impact on network operations when deleting bridge VLANs.

  • How do I fix CVE-2025-37865?

    To fix CVE-2025-37865, update your Linux kernel to the latest version where the vulnerability has been patched.

  • Which versions of the Linux Kernel are affected by CVE-2025-37865?

    CVE-2025-37865 affects older versions of the Linux kernel that do not have the fix applied.

  • What does CVE-2025-37865 impact?

    CVE-2025-37865 impacts the ability to delete bridge VLANs in networking scenarios when MST is unsupported.

  • Who reported the vulnerability CVE-2025-37865?

    CVE-2025-37865 was reported by Russell King.

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