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Linux CVE-2026-46110

| EUVD-2026-32869
2026-05-28 416baaa9-dc9f-4396-8d5f-8c081fb06d67 GHSA-5hfj-3vgw-hm4r

Lifecycle Timeline

2
Patch available
May 28, 2026 - 12:31 EUVD
CVE Published
May 28, 2026 - 10:16 nvd
UNKNOWN (no severity yet)

DescriptionNVD

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

net: stmmac: Prevent NULL deref when RX memory exhausted

The CPU receives frames from the MAC through conventional DMA: the CPU allocates buffers for the MAC, then the MAC fills them and returns ownership to the CPU. For each hardware RX queue, the CPU and MAC coordinate through a shared ring array of DMA descriptors: one descriptor per DMA buffer. Each descriptor includes the buffer's physical address and a status flag ("OWN") indicating which side owns the buffer: OWN=0 for CPU, OWN=1 for MAC. The CPU is only allowed to set the flag and the MAC is only allowed to clear it, and both must move through the ring in sequence: thus the ring is used for both "submissions" and "completions."

In the stmmac driver, stmmac_rx() bookmarks its position in the ring with the cur_rx index. The main receive loop in that function checks for rx_descs[cur_rx].own=0, gives the corresponding buffer to the network stack (NULLing the pointer), and increments cur_rx modulo the ring size. After the loop exits, stmmac_rx_refill(), which bookmarks its position with dirty_rx, allocates fresh buffers and rearms the descriptors (setting OWN=1). If it fails any allocation, it simply stops early (leaving OWN=0) and will retry where it left off when next called.

This means descriptors have a three-stage lifecycle (terms my own):

  • empty (OWN=1, buffer valid)
  • full (OWN=0, buffer valid and populated)
  • dirty (OWN=0, buffer NULL)

But because stmmac_rx() only checks OWN, it confuses full/dirty. In the past (see 'Fixes:'), there was a bug where the loop could cycle cur_rx all the way back to the first descriptor it dirtied, resulting in a NULL dereference when mistaken for full. The aforementioned commit resolved that *specific* failure by capping the loop's iteration limit at dma_rx_size - 1, but this is only a partial fix: if the previous stmmac_rx_refill() didn't complete, then there are leftover dirty descriptors that the loop might encounter without needing to cycle fully around. The current code therefore panics (see 'Closes:') when stmmac_rx_refill() is memory-starved long enough for cur_rx to catch up to dirty_rx.

Fix this by explicitly checking, before advancing cur_rx, if the next entry is dirty; exit the loop if so. This prevents processing of the final, used descriptor until stmmac_rx_refill() succeeds, but fully prevents the cur_rx == dirty_rx ambiguity as the previous bugfix intended: so remove the clamp as well. Since stmmac_rx_zc() is a copy-paste-and-tweak of stmmac_rx() and the code structure is identical, any fix to stmmac_rx() will also need a corresponding fix for stmmac_rx_zc(). Therefore, apply the same check there.

In stmmac_rx() (not stmmac_rx_zc()), a related bug remains: after the MAC sets OWN=0 on the final descriptor, it will be unable to send any further DMA-complete IRQs until it's given more empty descriptors. Currently, the driver simply *hopes* that the next stmmac_rx_refill() succeeds, risking an indefinite stall of the receive process if not. But this is not a regression, so it can be addressed in a future change.

Analysis

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: net: stmmac: Prevent NULL deref when RX memory exhausted The CPU receives frames from the MAC through conventional DMA: the CPU allocates buffers for the MAC, then the MAC fills them and returns ownership to the CPU. For each hardware RX queue, the CPU and MAC coordinate through a shared ring array of DMA descriptors: one descriptor per DMA buffer. …

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CVE-2026-46110 vulnerability details – vuln.today

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