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    Home»Security»Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs)»CVE-2025-6392 – Brocade SANnav Clear Text Database Password Logging Vulnerability

    CVE-2025-6392 – Brocade SANnav Clear Text Database Password Logging Vulnerability

    July 10, 2025

    CVE ID : CVE-2025-6392

    Published : July 10, 2025, 10:15 p.m. | 24 minutes ago

    Description : Brocade SANnav before Brocade SANnav 2.4.0a could log database passwords in clear text in audit logs when the daily data dump collector invokes docker exec commands. These audit logs are the local server VM’s audit logs and are not controlled by SANnav. These logs are only visible to the server admin of the host server and are not visible to the SANnav admin or any SANnav user.

    Severity: 0.0 | NA

    Visit the link for more details, such as CVSS details, affected products, timeline, and more…

    Source: Read More

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    CVE-2025-37988 – Apache Linux Kernel Mount Namespace Locking races

    May 20, 2025

    CVE ID : CVE-2025-37988

    Published : May 20, 2025, 6:15 p.m. | 34 minutes ago

    Description : In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:

    fix a couple of races in MNT_TREE_BENEATH handling by do_move_mount()

    Normally do_lock_mount(path, _) is locking a mountpoint pinned by
    *path and at the time when matching unlock_mount() unlocks that
    location it is still pinned by the same thing.

    Unfortunately, for ‘beneath’ case it’s no longer that simple –
    the object being locked is not the one *path points to. It’s the
    mountpoint of path->mnt. The thing is, without sufficient locking
    ->mnt_parent may change under us and none of the locks are held
    at that point. The rules are
    * mount_lock stabilizes m->mnt_parent for any mount m.
    * namespace_sem stabilizes m->mnt_parent, provided that
    m is mounted.
    * if either of the above holds and refcount of m is positive,
    we are guaranteed the same for refcount of m->mnt_parent.

    namespace_sem nests inside inode_lock(), so do_lock_mount() has
    to take inode_lock() before grabbing namespace_sem. It does
    recheck that path->mnt is still mounted in the same place after
    getting namespace_sem, and it does take care to pin the dentry.
    It is needed, since otherwise we might end up with racing mount –move
    (or umount) happening while we were getting locks; in that case
    dentry would no longer be a mountpoint and could’ve been evicted
    on memory pressure along with its inode – not something you want
    when grabbing lock on that inode.

    However, pinning a dentry is not enough – the matching mount is
    also pinned only by the fact that path->mnt is mounted on top it
    and at that point we are not holding any locks whatsoever, so
    the same kind of races could end up with all references to
    that mount gone just as we are about to enter inode_lock().
    If that happens, we are left with filesystem being shut down while
    we are holding a dentry reference on it; results are not pretty.

    What we need to do is grab both dentry and mount at the same time;
    that makes inode_lock() safe *and* avoids the problem with fs getting
    shut down under us. After taking namespace_sem we verify that
    path->mnt is still mounted (which stabilizes its ->mnt_parent) and
    check that it’s still mounted at the same place. From that point
    on to the matching namespace_unlock() we are guaranteed that
    mount/dentry pair we’d grabbed are also pinned by being the mountpoint
    of path->mnt, so we can quietly drop both the dentry reference (as
    the current code does) and mnt one – it’s OK to do under namespace_sem,
    since we are not dropping the final refs.

    That solves the problem on do_lock_mount() side; unlock_mount()
    also has one, since dentry is guaranteed to stay pinned only until
    the namespace_unlock(). That’s easy to fix – just have inode_unlock()
    done earlier, while it’s still pinned by mp->m_dentry.

    Severity: 0.0 | NA

    Visit the link for more details, such as CVSS details, affected products, timeline, and more…

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