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Tested on my EPYC test bench (so not really relevant), but at least nothing broke
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@gduperrey Updated my two host playlab (Dell Optiplex 9010, Intel i5-3550 CPU). Everything works as expected, but I doubt my CPUs are relevant for the update either.
I have a strange
INTERNAL_ERROR((Failure "Expected string, got 'N'"))
error with Xen Orchestra (from 3rd party script update to commita1bcd
) when creating a new Debian 11 VM as part of my test procedure, but I could continue with XCP-ng Center. Just found and will follow xoce INTERNAL_ERROR while trying to create VM. -
Yes, it's likely unrelated Thanks for the report @gskger !
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Update released. Thanks everyone for testing!
https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2022/05/16/may-2022-security-update/
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New update candidate: uefistored
As microsoft.com recently blocked the user agent our
secureboot-certs
script uses to download UEFI Secure Boot certificates from them, we took the following actions:- Documented how to download and install the certificates manually: https://xcp-ng.org/docs/guides.html#install-the-default-uefi-certificates-manually
- Changed the user agent in
secureboot-certs
to make the automated download and installation possible again. - Added a new
--user-agent
parameter tosecureboot-certs install
to let you override the default easily in case of future need. - Improved the error message in case of download failure to 1. let users know about the
--user-agent
parameter and 2. provide the link towards the manual installation instructions.
Test on XCP-ng 8.2
From an up to date host:
yum clean metadata --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing yum update uefistored --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing
No toolstack restart or reboot needed.
Versions:
- uefistored: 1.1.5-1.xcpng8.2.x86_64
What to test
UEFI VMs. Secure Boot. Installation of certificates using
secureboot-certs install
: manual install, automated install with default user agent, automated install with--user-agent
parameter.Test window before official release of the updates
~ 1 week. Maybe more if it allows to synchronise with other updates not too far in the future.
-
@stormi It installs and runs....
The "help" does not mention the user-agent option.
-
@Andrew That's because
install
is a sub-command:secureboot-certs install -h
.Anyway, if download fails (you can test by using "test" as the user agent for example), the option will be mentioned.
-
To me, this
uefistored
update is ready, but I'll group it with the next updates.Test feedback remains welcome.
-
New security update (xen)
Impact: when the conditions are met (roughly: CPU Model, PV guest + PCI passthrough or race condition exploitation), an attacker in a malicious VM may escalate privilege and control the whole host.
Upstream (Xen project) references: XSA-401 and XSA-402
Test on XCP-ng 8.2
From an up to date host:
yum clean metadata --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing yum update xen-dom0-libs xen-dom0-tools xen-hypervisor xen-libs xen-tools --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing reboot
Versions:
- xen-*: 4.13.4-9.22.2.xcpng8.2
What to test
Normal use and anything else you want to test. The closer to your actual use of XCP-ng, the better.
Test window before official release of the updates
~2 days.
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@stormi Update worked fine and no problems so far. Did the usual tests to create, move, snapshot, backup and restored some Linux and Windows VMs.
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@stormi I've had it running for 24 hours on several active machines doing the usual jobs. Seems good.
-
Same here
-
Update released (xen + uefistored). Thanks for your tests!
Blog: https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2022/06/13/june-security-update-1/
-
New security update (xen, Intel CPUs)
Xen is being updated to mitigate hardware vulnerabilities in Intel CPUs.
- Upstream (Xen project) advisory: XSA-404
- Citrix Hypervisor Security Bulletin (which also covers vulnerabilities that we already fixed in the previous update): https://support.citrix.com/article/CTX460064/citrix-hypervisor-security-update
Impact of the vulnerabilities - I'll quote Citrix' security team here: "may allow code inside a guest VM to access very small sections of memory data that are actively being used elsewhere on the system"
Test on XCP-ng 8.2
From an up to date host:
yum clean metadata --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing yum update xen-dom0-libs xen-dom0-tools xen-hypervisor xen-libs xen-tools --enablerepo=xcp-ng-testing reboot
Versions:
- xen-*: 4.13.4-9.23.1.xcpng8.2
What to test
Normal use and anything else you want to test. The closer to your actual use of XCP-ng, the better.
Test window before official release of the updates
~2 days.
-
@stormi
This seems to be working well on my test pool. -
Same here
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@stormi The initial update worked fine on my playlab (two Dell Optiplex 9010, Intel i5-3550 CPU, Synology shared NFS storage)
, but I can not migrate VMs between hosts anymore. Neither XO from third party script (commit 395d8, xo-server 5.96.0, xo-web 5.97.2) nor XCP-ng Center 20.04.01 work.Edit: After a complete (bare metal) restart of hosts and storage systems, everything works as expected (create, migrate, start/stop, snapshot of VMs), so I can only blame myself
-
@stormi The update has been OK for me on a bunch of standard machines (older Intel/AMD) over the last day. Normal VM operation, migration, backups, reboots, etc.
I'm having problems with cross host VxLANs, but I can't blame the update for that. I reinitialized the XO SDN plugin and it's working again. It may have something to do with changing pool masters and rebooting the hub server.
-
The update is published. Thanks for your tests!
Blog post: https://xcp-ng.org/blog/2022/06/27/june-2022-security-update-2/
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Thanks for the new update!
We're trying to determine if we are vulnerable to this. In https://xenbits.xen.org/xsa/advisory-404.html I see:
Per Xen's support statement, PCI passthrough should be to trusted
domains because the overall system security depends on factors outside
of Xen's control.
As such, Xen, in a supported configuration, is not vulnerable to
DRPW/SBDR.
Does this mean we are not vulnerable to XSA-404 if we do not use PCI Passthrough?
Cheers,
Niels