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    Home»Security»Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs)»CVE-2025-38351 – KVM Hyper-V Canonical GVA Vulnerability

    CVE-2025-38351 – KVM Hyper-V Canonical GVA Vulnerability

    July 19, 2025

    CVE ID : CVE-2025-38351

    Published : July 19, 2025, 12:15 p.m. | 11 hours, 38 minutes ago

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

    KVM: x86/hyper-v: Skip non-canonical addresses during PV TLB flush

    In KVM guests with Hyper-V hypercalls enabled, the hypercalls
    HVCALL_FLUSH_VIRTUAL_ADDRESS_LIST and HVCALL_FLUSH_VIRTUAL_ADDRESS_LIST_EX
    allow a guest to request invalidation of portions of a virtual TLB.
    For this, the hypercall parameter includes a list of GVAs that are supposed
    to be invalidated.

    However, when non-canonical GVAs are passed, there is currently no
    filtering in place and they are eventually passed to checked invocations of
    INVVPID on Intel / INVLPGA on AMD. While AMD’s INVLPGA silently ignores
    non-canonical addresses (effectively a no-op), Intel’s INVVPID explicitly
    signals VM-Fail and ultimately triggers the WARN_ONCE in invvpid_error():

    invvpid failed: ext=0x0 vpid=1 gva=0xaaaaaaaaaaaaa000
    WARNING: CPU: 6 PID: 326 at arch/x86/kvm/vmx/vmx.c:482
    invvpid_error+0x91/0xa0 [kvm_intel]
    Modules linked in: kvm_intel kvm 9pnet_virtio irqbypass fuse
    CPU: 6 UID: 0 PID: 326 Comm: kvm-vm Not tainted 6.15.0 #14 PREEMPT(voluntary)
    RIP: 0010:invvpid_error+0x91/0xa0 [kvm_intel]
    Call Trace:
    vmx_flush_tlb_gva+0x320/0x490 [kvm_intel]
    kvm_hv_vcpu_flush_tlb+0x24f/0x4f0 [kvm]
    kvm_arch_vcpu_ioctl_run+0x3013/0x5810 [kvm]

    Hyper-V documents that invalid GVAs (those that are beyond a partition’s
    GVA space) are to be ignored. While not completely clear whether this
    ruling also applies to non-canonical GVAs, it is likely fine to make that
    assumption, and manual testing on Azure confirms “real” Hyper-V interprets
    the specification in the same way.

    Skip non-canonical GVAs when processing the list of address to avoid
    tripping the INVVPID failure. Alternatively, KVM could filter out “bad”
    GVAs before inserting into the FIFO, but practically speaking the only
    downside of pushing validation to the final processing is that doing so
    is suboptimal for the guest, and no well-behaved guest will request TLB
    flushes for non-canonical addresses.

    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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