trebligdivad 10 hours ago

Nested virt on x86 is curiously painful; you'd kind of think each layer would be isolated, so that the L0 (hardware) would only have to worry about it's VM (L1), and L1 would have to worry about it's VM (L2); but nope - the L0 top level hypervisor sees faults from the L2 and has to figure out that they are actually L2 not L0. IMHO the extra complexity (and historical flakiness of it) - makes me say that enabling nesting is a bad idea for public VM hosts.

  • iririririr 1 hour ago

    but that's the entire point of kvm. that leak is the feature! that's how you get the performance boost.

br0ceph 15 hours ago

"If you operate an x86 KVM host that accepts multi-tenant guests and supports nested virtualization, or use an instance on top of one"

does this mean that you must have nested virtualization enabled to br vulnerable. does disabling this feature in the host os or bios, make you immune to this bug?

  • kurisufag 14 hours ago

    Nested virtualization prompts the use of shadow paging (where the bug is), is my understanding, where non-nested cases use hardware accelerated translation instead.

  • bonzini 2 hours ago

    Yes you can disable it via kernel module parameters kvm_intel.nested=0 or kvm_amd.nested=0.

CoastalCoder 8 hours ago

Some of the comments here talk about the risk this poses for multi tenant vm providers.

Wouldn't this also be a risk for people using VMs to sandbox untrusted code running on trusted hosts?

  • bonzini 2 hours ago

    In that case you'd have to combine this vulnerability with a local privilege escalation to reach guest kernel mode.

    Also the vulnerability requires enabling nested virtualization on the VM.

rvz 14 hours ago

The full write up is here: [0].

This is a very nasty vulnerability and risks any service that uses and allows nested x86 virtualization features at risk. Including those running VMs as a service.

> Running the PoC inside a guest VM can trigger a host kernel panic. A full escape exploit that works in a controlled environment also exists, but it is not released at this time and is planned to be released in the very distant future.

The first commit that introduced this vulnerability was in 2010. [1] So it was undiscovered for 16 years until now [2].

It was only a matter of time that a vulnerability in KVM would appear. This one is really not good as it is the first KVM guest-to-host exploit working on both AMD and Intel.

[0] https://github.com/V4bel/Januscape/blob/main/assets/write-up...

[1] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/lin...

[2] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/lin...

  • TedDoesntTalk 11 hours ago

    > So it was undiscovered for 16 years until now

    Publicly undiscovered

  • bonzini 2 hours ago

    KVM maintainer here.

    For what it's worth, this is a variant of a vulnerability discovered via fuzzing last April, CVE-2026-46113.

codedokode 12 hours ago

> LPE: On distributions such as RHEL, /dev/kvm is world-writable (0666), so an unprivileged user can also use this vulnerability as a reliable LPE to gain root.

Why on Linux device files are accessible by untrusted applications?

  • tryauuum 11 hours ago

    Not all device files, only /dev/kvm. I assume the logic was "with /dev/kvm access the user can ...allocate memory and execute code, which they already can, so why not allow it?". Could also make rootless isolation easier

    • codedokode 9 hours ago

      Different kernel modules might have different vulnerabilities.

  • cyberax 11 hours ago

    ???

    That's been the case forever: /dev/null, /dev/zero, /dev/stdin, ...

  • colechristensen 11 hours ago

    Very many "devices" aren't at all device-like.

  • Intralexical 9 hours ago

    Because if /dev/kvm isn't accessible to unprivileged users, then people will start using `sudo` to run anything involving virtualization, which would be much worse for security overall.

    • CoastalCoder 8 hours ago

      I'm just starting to read up on capabilities-based security in Linux.

      Would they potentially be a solution to sudo's all-or-nothing granularity in this domain?

      • msm_ 8 hours ago

        Linux capabilities have many problems (they are too coarse-grained and too many capabilities are root-equivalent). But anyway this is an overkill in this case probably. In may distributions access to /dev/kvm is guarded by membership in the kvm group - no need for new capability, just regular old filesystem permissions.

        • Intralexical 6 hours ago

          Would capabilities enable granting access to specific programs and not just users? Like using AppArmor profiles. So QEMU, gVisor, Docker etc. can still use KVM for unprivileged users, but malware wouldn't be able to access it directly.

          • codedokode 21 minutes ago

            That's the problem with many Linux distributions - their developers assume that you trust programs you run and if you run malware it is your fault. But you cannot trust commercial and closed-source programs so Linux is not ready for using them. Instead of solving the problem they simply make it user's responsibility.

            So as a responsible user I am slowly writing my own sandboxes, struggling with lack of documentation and designing workarounds.

        • quotemstr 2 hours ago

          > /dev/kvm is guarded by membership in the kvm group - no need for new capability, just regular old filesystem permissions.

          Which is precisely why many kinds of kernel feature should be exposed as operations on device nodes, not as system calls usable out of thin air. UGO and ACL permissions work on device nodes!

  • yjftsjthsd-h 9 hours ago

    1: As siblings note, some device files are wide open, some are limited to a given user group, and some are root-only.

    2: Because it's desirable for users to be able to run VMs.

  • fulafel 3 hours ago

    Linux controls access using configurable file permissions, so this has a false premise. The better question is doesn't RHEL really use a kvm group to limit access like other distributions? If so, why?

    • codedokode 5 minutes ago

      The permissions are per-user, not per-app and that is the problem. The distibution developers assume that you trust the programs you run, but how can I trust commercial and proprietary software? How can I trust the code from a random guy on Github without a passport verification?

TZubiri 13 hours ago

hey, here's a good rule of thumb.

If you share resources, that reduces costs, but increases security risks.

choose whether to share a filesystem, an OS, a kernel, hardware, or just use a dedicated server.

The economics of sharing resources are all in a tiny sliver of the budget spectrum, the shoestring budget range :

0-1$/mo: serverless

1$-5$/mo containers

5$-200$/mo Virtual Machine(s)

200$-1Billion$/month , at least one dedicated server

So if your hourly is worth anywhere upwards of 5$/hr, and your project has any semblance of seriousness, just use a dedicated server, and avoid a whole class of LPE vulnerabilities just to save some $.

Businesses have expenses, let's stop pretending that all of these non dedicated server infrastructures are serious. Shell out 200$/month or stick to hobby status.

No, I don't sell dedicated servers, but I should

  • Scotrix 13 hours ago

    I run 3 servers for 200 EUR, thanks to Hetzner, exactly for this reason (and I’m cheap and I never understood cloud/services like Vercel and Railway as serious alternatives ;-)).

  • antonvs 13 hours ago

    If you can run everything you need on two or three servers, what you describe can work. But it’s still hobby status, basically. The equation changes when the scale gets significantly bigger. Managing a non-trivial hardware fleet requires people, and people cost money.

    The reason “managed services” of all kinds, including cloud services, are so widespread in business is because someone else is managing things so that you don’t have to. This is as serious as it gets in business. Managing your own hardware makes very little sense for many, if not most companies.

    • tetha 12 hours ago

      Own hardware has a weird scaling curve.

      It does not make sense for a lot of time and scaling. You need 3+ people maintaining it, you have upfront costs in the hundreds of thousands of euros on the very lower end. If you don't utilize that money spent, sucks to be you. You have planning times in the area of months, not hours, unless you keep capacity you don't use around (rackspace, cabling, power/cooling capacity).

      On the other hand, if you have that hardware management running, it's very amazing. Before the AI nuke, We were looking at moving various systems fully bare metal, because it would simplify management on both sides a lot, and a common statement I heard is "We don't deal with systems that small. If we do bare metal container hosting, we don't measure in dozens of gigabytes of memory. Your business case validates that investment. Here is btw three test systems about double your requirement, just old".

      Before the AI nonsense (HBM Memory Demand -> RAM & SSD prices), this would result in very competitive hosting costs after some scale, when amortized across 5 years and then tossed into the testing environment until it stops functioning. And these testing environments allow for a lot of experimentation and failover testing.

      Though now it's all very different and not clear.

    • codedokode 11 hours ago

      One server is enough for many small businesses. And for large business (like X or Instagram) it is economically more profitable to own their servers. For example, in my country top companies like VK or Yandex own their datacenters and sell cloud services instead of paying for someone's else cloud.

      Also if you have several servers you do not need to hire a full-time sysadmin.

      > Managing a non-trivial hardware fleet requires people, and people cost money.

      People in AWS also cost money and guess who is going to cover this cost?

      • cyberax 11 hours ago

        Suppose that you are a midsize company or a b2b service, so you want to make sure that your service has minimum downtime.

        This means that you need sysadmins in close proximity to your hardware to do hardware swapping/troubleshooting. Or you need to engineer your system to not have a SPOF (which is not easy). So you're looking at employing at least 2 engineers near your datacenter.

        • calvinmorrison 9 hours ago

          Really? We basically never go onsight. Ticket in with the colo and they can help.

          • cyberax 8 hours ago

            That really works well while you have a rack or so. Afterwards, you really need people who know all the details of networking and storage. Especially if you're designing something without a SPOF.

            What's changing is the scope of things that you can run on that one rack. 15 years ago, I was running clusters of 30 computers to do things that I now can do with 1.

    • zuzululu 11 hours ago

      i dont get this dedicated servers = hobby mentality

      you can do a ton with just a couple of dedicated servers with the redundancy you need

      • dboreham 4 hours ago

        Three really, but otherwise yes.

    • TZubiri 9 hours ago

      There seems to be some confusion, although one other user interpreted the same thing, I still believe it's a misinterpretation.

      I said dedicated servers, I never said anything about owning or managing the hardware. You can rent a dedicated server.

      The decision to virtualize and the decision to own the hardware are separate decisions.

rballpug 12 hours ago

KVM, or x86 identified mail validation.