Описание
A design flaw issue was found in the Red Hat OpenStack Platform director use of TripleO to enable libvirtd based live-migration. Libvirtd is deployed by default (by director) listening on 0.0.0.0 (all interfaces) with no-authentication or encryption. Anyone able to make a TCP connection to any compute host IP address, including 127.0.0.1, other loopback interface addresses, or in some cases possibly addresses that have been exposed beyond the management interface, could use this to open a virsh session to the libvirtd instance and gain control of virtual machine instances or possibly take over the host.
Ссылки
- Third Party AdvisoryVDB Entry
- Vendor Advisory
- Vendor Advisory
- Vendor Advisory
- Vendor Advisory
- MitigationVendor Advisory
- Issue TrackingMitigationVendor Advisory
- Vendor Advisory
- Third Party AdvisoryVDB Entry
- Vendor Advisory
- Vendor Advisory
- Vendor Advisory
- Vendor Advisory
- MitigationVendor Advisory
- Issue TrackingMitigationVendor Advisory
- Vendor Advisory
Уязвимые конфигурации
Одно из
EPSS
9.9 Critical
CVSS3
10 Critical
CVSS3
10 Critical
CVSS2
Дефекты
Связанные уязвимости
A design flaw issue was found in the Red Hat OpenStack Platform director use of TripleO to enable libvirtd based live-migration. Libvirtd is deployed by default (by director) listening on 0.0.0.0 (all interfaces) with no-authentication or encryption. Anyone able to make a TCP connection to any compute host IP address, including 127.0.0.1, other loopback interface addresses, or in some cases possibly addresses that have been exposed beyond the management interface, could use this to open a virsh session to the libvirtd instance and gain control of virtual machine instances or possibly take over the host.
A design flaw issue was found in the Red Hat OpenStack Platform director use of TripleO to enable libvirtd based live-migration. Libvirtd is deployed by default (by director) listening on 0.0.0.0 (all interfaces) with no-authentication or encryption. Anyone able to make a TCP connection to any compute host IP address, including 127.0.0.1, other loopback interface addresses, or in some cases possibly addresses that have been exposed beyond the management interface, could use this to open a virsh session to the libvirtd instance and gain control of virtual machine instances or possibly take over the host.
EPSS
9.9 Critical
CVSS3
10 Critical
CVSS3
10 Critical
CVSS2