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    Home»Learning Resources»3 sticky insights from 3 eng management books

    3 sticky insights from 3 eng management books

    June 3, 2025

    Ever feel like your brain is blended and you can’t even keep up with the things you’re learning? Me too. But the good shit stays.

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    Highlights

    CVE-2025-38349 – Linux Kernel Epoll Use-After-Free Vulnerability

    July 18, 2025

    CVE ID : CVE-2025-38349

    Published : July 18, 2025, 8:15 a.m. | 2 hours, 42 minutes ago

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

    eventpoll: don’t decrement ep refcount while still holding the ep mutex

    Jann Horn points out that epoll is decrementing the ep refcount and then
    doing a

    mutex_unlock(&ep->mtx);

    afterwards. That’s very wrong, because it can lead to a use-after-free.

    That pattern is actually fine for the very last reference, because the
    code in question will delay the actual call to “ep_free(ep)” until after
    it has unlocked the mutex.

    But it’s wrong for the much subtler “next to last” case when somebody
    *else* may also be dropping their reference and free the ep while we’re
    still using the mutex.

    Note that this is true even if that other user is also using the same ep
    mutex: mutexes, unlike spinlocks, can not be used for object ownership,
    even if they guarantee mutual exclusion.

    A mutex “unlock” operation is not atomic, and as one user is still
    accessing the mutex as part of unlocking it, another user can come in
    and get the now released mutex and free the data structure while the
    first user is still cleaning up.

    See our mutex documentation in Documentation/locking/mutex-design.rst,
    in particular the section [1] about semantics:

    “mutex_unlock() may access the mutex structure even after it has
    internally released the lock already – so it’s not safe for
    another context to acquire the mutex and assume that the
    mutex_unlock() context is not using the structure anymore”

    So if we drop our ep ref before the mutex unlock, but we weren’t the
    last one, we may then unlock the mutex, another user comes in, drops
    _their_ reference and releases the ‘ep’ as it now has no users – all
    while the mutex_unlock() is still accessing it.

    Fix this by simply moving the ep refcount dropping to outside the mutex:
    the refcount itself is atomic, and doesn’t need mutex protection (that’s
    the whole _point_ of refcounts: unlike mutexes, they are inherently
    about object lifetimes).

    Severity: 0.0 | NA

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

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