First published: Mon May 23 2016(Updated: )
The kernel packages contain the Linux kernel, the core of any Linux operating system.<br>Security Fix(es):<br><li> Two flaws were found in the way the Linux kernel's networking implementation handled UDP packets with incorrect checksum values. A remote attacker could potentially use these flaws to trigger an infinite loop in the kernel, resulting in a denial of service on the system, or cause a denial of service in applications using the edge triggered epoll functionality. (CVE-2015-5364, CVE-2015-5366, Important)</li> Bug Fix(es):<br><li> Prior to this update, if processes that generate interrupts were active during the guest shutdown sequence, the virtio driver in some cases did not correctly clear the interrupts. As a consequence, the guest kernel became unresponsive, which prevented the shutdown from completing. With this update, the virtio driver processes interrupts more effectively, and guests now shut down reliably in the described scenario. (BZ#1323568)</li> <li> At a process or thread exit, when the Linux kernel undoes any SysV semaphore operations done previously (the ones done using semop with the SEM_UNDO flag), there was a possible flaw and race with another process or thread removing the same semaphore set where the operations occurred, leading to possible use of in-kernel-freed memory and then to possible unpredictable behavior. This bug could be noticed with software which uses IPC SysV semaphores, such as IBM DB2, which for example in certain cases could lead to some of its processes or utilities to get incorrectly stalled in some IPC semaphore operation or syscall after the race or problem happened. A patch has been provided to fix this bug, and the kernel now behaves as expected in the aforementioned scenario. (BZ#1326341)</li>
Affected Software | Affected Version | How to fix |
---|---|---|
redhat/kernel | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/kernel | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/kernel-debug | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/kernel-debug-debuginfo | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/kernel-debug-devel | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/kernel-debuginfo | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/kernel-devel | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/kernel-doc | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/kernel-firmware | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/kernel-headers | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/perf | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/perf-debuginfo | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/python-perf | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
redhat/python-perf-debuginfo | <2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 | 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 |
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The severity of RHSA-2016:1096 is classified as moderate.
To fix RHSA-2016:1096, you should update the affected kernel packages to version 2.6.32-358.71.1.el6 or later.
RHSA-2016:1096 affects users running specific versions of the Linux kernel on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.
RHSA-2016:1096 addresses two flaws in the Linux kernel's networking implementation related to handling UDP packets with incorrect checksum values.
There is no specific workaround provided for RHSA-2016:1096; updating the kernel is recommended to mitigate the vulnerabilities.