ZDI-22-759: Trend Micro Password Manager Link Following Privilege Escalation Vulnerability

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This vulnerability allows local attackers to escalate privileges on affected installations of Trend Micro Password Manager. An attacker must first obtain the ability to execute low-privileged code on the target system in order to exploit this vulnerability.

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F5 BIG-IP Remote Command Execution Vulnerability (CVE-2022-1388)

Read Time:2 Minute, 21 Second

FortiGuard Labs is aware of a new remote command execution vulnerability affecting F5 BIG-IP clients. Exploiting this vulnerability will allow an attacker to completely take over an affected device. What are the Technical Details of this Vulnerability?According to the F5 security advisory, this vulnerability may allow an unauthenticated attacker with network access to the BIG-IP system through the management port and/or self IP addresses to execute arbitrary system commands, create or delete files, or disable services. There is no data plane exposure; this is a control plane issue only.Because this vulnerability does not require any sophistication to exploit, and the fact that in-the-wild exploitation are reported to have been observed and proof-of-concept (PoC) codes are publicly available, it is highly recommended that organizations affected by this latest vulnerability apply all patches immediately.What Versions Are Affected?Reported versions affected by CVE-2022-1388 are:BIG-IP versions 16.1.2 through 13.1.0 (versions under 13.1.0 are affected but will not be fixed)How Serious of an Issue is This?HIGH. CVE-2022-1388 has a CVSS score of 9.8. US-CERT (CISA) has also issued an alert for this issue. For further information, please refer to F5 Releases Security Advisories Addressing Multiple Vulnerabilities in the APPENDIX.How Widespread is this Attack?Global. Malicious scans by attackers are currently underway looking for vulnerable unpatched appliances, regardless of location. Proof-of-concept codes (POC) are available and the vulnerability is reported to have been actively exploited in the wild.What is the Status of Coverage?Customers running current (IPS) definitions are protected by:F5.BIG-IP.iControl.REST.Authentication.BypassFortiGuard Labs is continuously monitoring this vulnerability and we will update this Threat Signal once more information becomes available.Are There Any Reports of Nation State Activity Actively Exploiting CVE-2022-1388?Yes, the vulnerability is reported to have been actively exploited in the wild.Any Other Suggested Mitigation?According to F5, it is recommended to apply all available patches from the May 2022 update immediately. If patching is not possible at this time, F5 recommends blocking all access to the iControl REST interface of your BIG-IP system through self IP addresses. Mitigation details can be found in the article titled – “K23605346: BIG-IP iControl REST vulnerability CVE-2022-1388” in the APPENDIX section.The potential for damage to daily operations, reputation, and unwanted release of data, the disruption of business operations, etc. is apparent, and because of this it is important to keep all AV and IPS signatures up to date. It is also important to ensure that all known vendor vulnerabilities within an organization are addressed once available, and updated on a regular basis to protect against attackers establishing a foothold within a network.

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Microsoft Patch Tuesday, May 2022 Edition

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Microsoft today released updates to fix at least 74 separate security problems in its Windows operating systems and related software. This month’s patch batch includes fixes for seven “critical” flaws, as well as a zero-day vulnerability that affects all supported versions of Windows.

By all accounts, the most urgent bug Microsoft addressed this month is CVE-2022-26925, a weakness in a central component of Windows security (the “Local Security Authority” process within Windows). CVE-2022-26925 was publicly disclosed prior to today, and Microsoft says it is now actively being exploited in the wild. The flaw affects Windows 7 through 10 and Windows Server 2008 through 2022.

Greg Wiseman, product manager for Rapid7, said Microsoft has rated this vulnerability as important and assigned it a CVSS (danger) score of 8.1 (10 being the worst), although Microsoft notes that the CVSS score can be as high as 9.8 in certain situations.

“This allows attackers to perform a man-in-the-middle attack to force domain controllers to authenticate to the attacker using NTLM authentication,” Wiseman said. “This is very bad news when used in conjunction with an NTLM relay attack, potentially leading to remote code execution. This bug affects all supported versions of Windows, but Domain Controllers should be patched on a priority basis before updating other servers.”

Wiseman said the most recent time Microsoft patched a similar vulnerability — last August in CVE-2021-36942 — it was also being exploited in the wild under the name “PetitPotam.”

“CVE-2021-36942 was so bad it made CISA’s catalog of Known Exploited Vulnerabilities,” Wiseman said.

Seven of the flaws fixed today earned Microsoft’s most-dire “critical” label, which it assigns to vulnerabilities that can be exploited by malware or miscreants to remotely compromise a vulnerable Windows system without any help from the user.

Among those is CVE-2022-26937, which carries a CVSS score of 9.8, and affects services using the Windows Network File System (NFS). Trend Micro’s Zero Day Initiative notes that this bug could allow remote, unauthenticated attackers to execute code in the context of the Network File System (NFS) service on affected systems.

“NFS isn’t on by default, but it’s prevalent in environment where Windows systems are mixed with other OSes such as Linux or Unix,” ZDI’s Dustin Childs wrote. “If this describes your environment, you should definitely test and deploy this patch quickly.”

Once again, this month’s Patch Tuesday is sponsored by Windows Print Spooler, a core Windows service that keeps spooling out the security hits. May’s patches include four fixes for Print Spooler, including two information disclosure and two elevation of privilege flaws.

“All of the flaws are rated as important, and two of the three are considered more likely to be exploited,” said Satnam Narang, staff research engineer at Tenable. “Windows Print Spooler continues to remain a valuable target for attackers since PrintNightmare was disclosed nearly a year ago. Elevation of Privilege flaws in particular should be carefully prioritized, as we’ve seen ransomware groups like Conti favor them as part of its playbook.”

Other Windows components that received patches this month include .NET and Visual Studio, Microsoft Edge (Chromium-based), Microsoft Exchange Server, Office, Windows Hyper-V, Windows Authentication Methods, BitLocker, Remote Desktop Client, and Windows Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol.

Also today, Adobe issued five security bulletins to address at least 18 flaws in Adobe CloudFusion, Framemaker, InCopy, InDesign, and Adobe Character Animator. Adobe said it is not aware of any exploits in the wild for any of the issues addressed in today’s updates.

For a more granular look at the patches released by Microsoft today and indexed by severity and other metrics, check out the always-useful Patch Tuesday roundup from the SANS Internet Storm Center. And it’s not a bad idea to hold off updating for a few days until Microsoft works out any kinks in the updates: AskWoody.com usually has the skinny on any patches that may be causing problems for Windows users.

As always, please consider backing up your system or at least your important documents and data before applying system updates. And if you run into any problems with these patches, please drop a note about it here in the comments.

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USN-5259-3: Cron regression

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USN-5259-1 and USN-5259-2 fixed vulnerabilities in Cron. Unfortunately
that update was incomplete and could introduce a regression. This update
fixes the problem.

We apologize for the inconvenience.

Original advisory details:

It was discovered that the postinst maintainer script in Cron unsafely
handled file permissions during package install or update operations.
An attacker could possibly use this issue to perform a privilege
escalation attack. (CVE-2017-9525)

Florian Weimer discovered that Cron incorrectly handled certain memory
operations during crontab file creation. An attacker could possibly use
this issue to cause a denial of service. (CVE-2019-9704)

It was discovered that Cron incorrectly handled user input during crontab
file creation. An attacker could possibly use this issue to cause a denial
of service. (CVE-2019-9705)

It was discovered that Cron contained a use-after-free vulnerability in
its force_rescan_user function. An attacker could possibly use this issue
to cause a denial of service. (CVE-2019-9706)

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Aussie Children Have 2nd Highest Rate of Cyberbullying, Time To Focus on Digital Parenting

Read Time:6 Minute, 5 Second

Whether it was bush fires, Covid, floods, or the Ukraine conflict, the news agenda over the last two years has been jam-packed. So, when McAfee released the findings of their first Global Connected Family Study, it was clear to me that connecting safely online needs to make it back into the news. 

Over 15,000 parents and 12,000 children aged 10-18 from 10 countries (including Australia) were interviewed for the study with the goal of finding out how families both connect and protect themselves online. So, let me share with you the results that need to spring us into action. 

Aussie children report the 2nd highest rate of cyberbullying (24%) out of the 10 countries surveyed. US children reported the highest rate. The average for all countries was 17%. 

Aussie parents are not completely aware of what’s happening in their children’s digital lives with just 20% nominating that their child had experienced cyberbullying while in fact 24% had experienced it. 

Children want to feel safe online and 73% of those surveyed look to their parents more than any other resource for help however parents are struggling to deliver. 

Parents are more inclined to protect their daughters online than their sons. Girls aged 10-14 were more likely to have parental controls on their PCs/laptops in almost every country surveyed. 

Children and teens want their privacy online and more than half (59%) will take steps to actively hide their online activity from hiding their browsing history to omitting details about what they are doing online. 

What Can We Do About It? 

I’m the first to admit that being a digital parent can be incredibly overwhelming. Staying abreast of the latest trends, apps and social media platforms can seem like a full-time job! And let’s not forget the latest threats and risks too. But findings, like the ones above, do have a way of shaking up priorities and do serve to provide clarity on where we need to focus our attention as parents.  

So, let’s break it down into 5 steps that you can take to ensure you are minimising the negativity and risks your kids may experience online: 

1. Check Your Family’s Communication Culture 

Without a doubt, one of the best things you can do for your family is create a culture where honest and genuine communication is a feature of everyday life. If your kids know they can confide in you, no matter what the problem is, then they are far more likely to come to you before a problem such as cyberbullying can feel unsolvable.  

2. Commit to Understanding Your Kids’ Online World 

It’s impossible to set boundaries and appreciate the risks in the digital world, if you don’t really know what your kids are dealing with. You may have little natural interest in joining Kik, Snapchat or Instagram but if you kids use it – then you know what you need to do! And if your kids can see that you are more actively involved online and using similar platforms, they will be more likely to come to you if they experience a problem. 

3. Introduce A Family Technology Contract 

In my opinion, one of the biggest causes of issues online is the fact that children are given internet-enabled devices that require adult levels of maturity and problem-solving skills. But let’s keep it real – that horse has bolted – most of our kids have phones in their pockets! So, the best way of managing this is to introduce a family technology contract.  

Now this can be as simple or complex as you feel is necessary for your tribe. You may want to insist on just a few rules such as not sharing passwords with friends, seeking permission before downloading apps, and always being kind online. You could simply write these on a piece of paper and have your kids sign it. Whatever works for you but remember, the research is showing that our kids are looking to us to help keep them safe online, so include as much here as you think your kids need. And of course, these need to be age-appropriate. I love this one for under 5’s from our eSafety Commissioner and this one is great for tweens and teens from The Modern Parent. 

4. Talk Cyberbullying (And Empathy) With Your Kids 

Bullying has existed long before the internet was even a word so unfortunately, it isn’t going anywhere. But coupled with the intensity and very public nature of the online world, it can be devastating. In my opinion, the key to cyberbullying is prevention. So, ensuring your kids know they can come to you with any problem, having a tight connection with your child so you can pick when things are ‘off’ and arming them with a basic cyber safety toolkit (not sharing passwords, privacy settings on, being kind online & having time away from devices) is essential.  

One of the ways we can also keep our kids from making mistakes online is by teaching them empathy. If kids haven’t developed empathy, then they make decisions based solely on their own desires – without any consideration for others. Many experts believe that it is the absence of empathy that leads directly to bullying.   

So, be a role model and start weaving the good old saying ‘do unto others as you would like them to do to you’ into your family dialogue.  

5. Consider Parental Controls & Protection Software 

The research findings are very clear: our kids want us to take charge of their online safety. So, let’s get technology working for us so we can keep them safe. 

Parental controls are not the silver bullet but when they are used in conjunction with proactive parenting then they can be transformative. McAfee’s Safe Family offers parents the ability to monitor device activity, limit screentime, block apps, and filter websites. This is a great way of teaching boundaries and limits while also giving yourself peace of mind that your kids are as safe as possible. 

Investing in comprehensive protection software for your (and your kid’s) devices is another way of adding a layer of protection to their online world. Comprehensive security software like McAfee’s Total Protection will protect against dangerous downloads, viruses, malware, online threats, and visits to risky websites. It will also encrypt the files on your computer and help manage your passwords! A complete no-brainer!!  

So, please don’t be overwhelmed and don’t even aim to be the perfect digital parent! Break it down and do the best you can because protecting our kids online needs to be a top priority. So, as soon as possible – check your family communication, take some time to understand your kids’ online world, put a digital contract in place, talk a little, and use some parental controls. But please do not forget about the power of role modeling. As parents, we are our kids’ biggest influencers so it might just be time for you to up your own digital safety game too!! 

Till next time. 

Stay safe everyone! 

The post Aussie Children Have 2nd Highest Rate of Cyberbullying, Time To Focus on Digital Parenting appeared first on McAfee Blog.

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python3-lxml-4.2.5-5.el7

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FEDORA-EPEL-2022-da4611426e

Packages in this update:

python3-lxml-4.2.5-5.el7

Update description:

Add patch to fix pass through of certain crafted script content and SVG embedded scripts via HTML Cleaner in lxml.html (#2032569)

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microcode_ctl-2.1-51.fc36

Read Time:5 Minute, 17 Second

FEDORA-2022-688cbbf106

Packages in this update:

microcode_ctl-2.1-51.fc36

Update description:

Update to upstream 2.1-36. 20220510
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-97-02) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-02)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-02)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-97-05) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-05)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-05)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-9a-03/0x80 (ADL-P 6+8/U 9W L0/R0) microcode at
revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-9a-04/0x80 (ADL-P 2+8 R0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-9a-03) at revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-9a-03/0x80 (ADL-P 6+8/U 9W L0/R0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-9a-04) at revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-9a-04/0x80 (ADL-P 2+8 R0) microcode at revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-02) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-02) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-bf-02)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-05) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-05) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-bf-05)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Update of 06-37-09/0x0f (VLV D0) microcode from revision 0x90c up
to 0x90d;
Update of 06-4e-03/0xc0 (SKL-U/U 2+3e/Y D0/K1) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-55-03/0x97 (SKX-SP B1) microcode from revision 0x100015c
up to 0x100015d;
Update of 06-55-04/0xb7 (SKX-D/SP/W/X H0/M0/M1/U0) microcode from
revision 0x2006c0a up to 0x2006d05;
Update of 06-55-06/0xbf (CLX-SP B0) microcode from revision 0x400320a
up to 0x4003302;
Update of 06-55-07/0xbf (CLX-SP/W/X B1/L1) microcode from revision
0x500320a up to 0x5003302;
Update of 06-55-0b/0xbf (CPX-SP A1) microcode from revision 0x7002402
up to 0x7002501;
Update of 06-5c-09/0x03 (APL D0) microcode from revision 0x46 up
to 0x48;
Update of 06-5e-03/0x36 (SKL-H/S/Xeon E3 N0/R0/S0) microcode from
revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-5f-01/0x01 (DNV B0) microcode from revision 0x36 up
to 0x38;
Update of 06-6a-06/0x87 (ICX-SP D0) microcode from revision 0xd000331
up to 0xd000363;
Update of 06-7a-01/0x01 (GLK B0) microcode from revision 0x38 up
to 0x3a;
Update of 06-7a-08/0x01 (GLK-R R0) microcode from revision 0x1c up
to 0x1e;
Update of 06-7e-05/0x80 (ICL-U/Y D1) microcode from revision 0xa8
up to 0xb0;
Update of 06-8a-01/0x10 (LKF B2/B3) microcode from revision 0x2d up
to 0x31;
Update of 06-8c-01/0x80 (TGL-UP3/UP4 B1) microcode from revision
0x9a up to 0xa4;
Update of 06-8c-02/0xc2 (TGL-R C0) microcode from revision 0x22 up
to 0x26;
Update of 06-8d-01/0xc2 (TGL-H R0) microcode from revision 0x3c up
to 0x3e;
Update of 06-8e-09/0x10 (AML-Y 2+2 H0) microcode from revision 0xec
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-09/0xc0 (KBL-U/U 2+3e/Y H0/J1) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-0a/0xc0 (CFL-U 4+3e D0, KBL-R Y0) microcode from
revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-0b/0xd0 (WHL-U W0) microcode from revision 0xec up
to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-0c/0x94 (AML-Y 4+2 V0, CML-U 4+2 V0, WHL-U V0)
microcode from revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-96-01/0x01 (EHL B1) microcode from revision 0x15 up
to 0x16;
Update of 06-9c-00/0x01 (JSL A0/A1) microcode from revision 0x2400001f
up to 0x24000023;
Update of 06-9e-09/0x2a (KBL-G/H/S/X/Xeon E3 B0) microcode from
revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0a/0x22 (CFL-H/S/Xeon E U0) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0b/0x02 (CFL-E/H/S B0) microcode from revision 0xec
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0c/0x22 (CFL-H/S/Xeon E P0) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0d/0x22 (CFL-H/S/Xeon E R0) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a5-02/0x20 (CML-H R1) microcode from revision 0xec up
to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a5-03/0x22 (CML-S 6+2 G1) microcode from revision 0xec
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a5-05/0x22 (CML-S 10+2 Q0) microcode from revision 0xee
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a6-00/0x80 (CML-U 6+2 A0) microcode from revision 0xea
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a6-01/0x80 (CML-U 6+2 v2 K1) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a7-01/0x02 (RKL-S B0) microcode from revision 0x50 up
to 0x53.
Addresses CVE-2022-0005, CVE-2022-21131, CVE-2022-21136, CVE-2022-21151

Update to upstream 2.1-35. 20220419
Update of 06-5c-0a/0x03 (APL B1/F1) microcode from revision 0x24 up to 0x28.

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microcode_ctl-2.1-47.3.fc35

Read Time:5 Minute, 17 Second

FEDORA-2022-9fdae2c607

Packages in this update:

microcode_ctl-2.1-47.3.fc35

Update description:

Update to upstream 2.1-36. 20220510
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-97-02) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-02)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-02)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-97-05) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-05)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-05)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-9a-03/0x80 (ADL-P 6+8/U 9W L0/R0) microcode at
revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-9a-04/0x80 (ADL-P 2+8 R0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-9a-03) at revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-9a-03/0x80 (ADL-P 6+8/U 9W L0/R0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-9a-04) at revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-9a-04/0x80 (ADL-P 2+8 R0) microcode at revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-02) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-02) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-bf-02)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-05) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-05) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-bf-05)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Update of 06-37-09/0x0f (VLV D0) microcode from revision 0x90c up
to 0x90d;
Update of 06-4e-03/0xc0 (SKL-U/U 2+3e/Y D0/K1) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-55-03/0x97 (SKX-SP B1) microcode from revision 0x100015c
up to 0x100015d;
Update of 06-55-04/0xb7 (SKX-D/SP/W/X H0/M0/M1/U0) microcode from
revision 0x2006c0a up to 0x2006d05;
Update of 06-55-06/0xbf (CLX-SP B0) microcode from revision 0x400320a
up to 0x4003302;
Update of 06-55-07/0xbf (CLX-SP/W/X B1/L1) microcode from revision
0x500320a up to 0x5003302;
Update of 06-55-0b/0xbf (CPX-SP A1) microcode from revision 0x7002402
up to 0x7002501;
Update of 06-5c-09/0x03 (APL D0) microcode from revision 0x46 up
to 0x48;
Update of 06-5e-03/0x36 (SKL-H/S/Xeon E3 N0/R0/S0) microcode from
revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-5f-01/0x01 (DNV B0) microcode from revision 0x36 up
to 0x38;
Update of 06-6a-06/0x87 (ICX-SP D0) microcode from revision 0xd000331
up to 0xd000363;
Update of 06-7a-01/0x01 (GLK B0) microcode from revision 0x38 up
to 0x3a;
Update of 06-7a-08/0x01 (GLK-R R0) microcode from revision 0x1c up
to 0x1e;
Update of 06-7e-05/0x80 (ICL-U/Y D1) microcode from revision 0xa8
up to 0xb0;
Update of 06-8a-01/0x10 (LKF B2/B3) microcode from revision 0x2d up
to 0x31;
Update of 06-8c-01/0x80 (TGL-UP3/UP4 B1) microcode from revision
0x9a up to 0xa4;
Update of 06-8c-02/0xc2 (TGL-R C0) microcode from revision 0x22 up
to 0x26;
Update of 06-8d-01/0xc2 (TGL-H R0) microcode from revision 0x3c up
to 0x3e;
Update of 06-8e-09/0x10 (AML-Y 2+2 H0) microcode from revision 0xec
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-09/0xc0 (KBL-U/U 2+3e/Y H0/J1) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-0a/0xc0 (CFL-U 4+3e D0, KBL-R Y0) microcode from
revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-0b/0xd0 (WHL-U W0) microcode from revision 0xec up
to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-0c/0x94 (AML-Y 4+2 V0, CML-U 4+2 V0, WHL-U V0)
microcode from revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-96-01/0x01 (EHL B1) microcode from revision 0x15 up
to 0x16;
Update of 06-9c-00/0x01 (JSL A0/A1) microcode from revision 0x2400001f
up to 0x24000023;
Update of 06-9e-09/0x2a (KBL-G/H/S/X/Xeon E3 B0) microcode from
revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0a/0x22 (CFL-H/S/Xeon E U0) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0b/0x02 (CFL-E/H/S B0) microcode from revision 0xec
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0c/0x22 (CFL-H/S/Xeon E P0) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0d/0x22 (CFL-H/S/Xeon E R0) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a5-02/0x20 (CML-H R1) microcode from revision 0xec up
to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a5-03/0x22 (CML-S 6+2 G1) microcode from revision 0xec
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a5-05/0x22 (CML-S 10+2 Q0) microcode from revision 0xee
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a6-00/0x80 (CML-U 6+2 A0) microcode from revision 0xea
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a6-01/0x80 (CML-U 6+2 v2 K1) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a7-01/0x02 (RKL-S B0) microcode from revision 0x50 up
to 0x53.
Addresses CVE-2022-0005, CVE-2022-21131, CVE-2022-21136, CVE-2022-21151

Update to upstream 2.1-35. 20220419
Update of 06-5c-0a/0x03 (APL B1/F1) microcode from revision 0x24 up to 0x28.

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microcode_ctl-2.1-46.3.fc34

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FEDORA-2022-e718888c8b

Packages in this update:

microcode_ctl-2.1-46.3.fc34

Update description:

Update to upstream 2.1-36. 20220510
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-97-02) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-02)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-02)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-97-05) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-05)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-97-05)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-9a-03/0x80 (ADL-P 6+8/U 9W L0/R0) microcode at
revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-9a-04/0x80 (ADL-P 2+8 R0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-9a-03) at revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-9a-03/0x80 (ADL-P 6+8/U 9W L0/R0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-9a-04) at revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-9a-04/0x80 (ADL-P 2+8 R0) microcode at revision 0x41c;
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-02) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-02) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-bf-02)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-02/0x03 (ADL-HX C0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-05) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-97-05/0x03 (ADL-S 6+0 K0) microcode (in
intel-ucode/06-bf-05) at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-02/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode (in intel-ucode/06-bf-05)
at revision 0x1f;
Addition of 06-bf-05/0x03 (ADL C0) microcode at revision 0x1f;
Update of 06-37-09/0x0f (VLV D0) microcode from revision 0x90c up
to 0x90d;
Update of 06-4e-03/0xc0 (SKL-U/U 2+3e/Y D0/K1) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-55-03/0x97 (SKX-SP B1) microcode from revision 0x100015c
up to 0x100015d;
Update of 06-55-04/0xb7 (SKX-D/SP/W/X H0/M0/M1/U0) microcode from
revision 0x2006c0a up to 0x2006d05;
Update of 06-55-06/0xbf (CLX-SP B0) microcode from revision 0x400320a
up to 0x4003302;
Update of 06-55-07/0xbf (CLX-SP/W/X B1/L1) microcode from revision
0x500320a up to 0x5003302;
Update of 06-55-0b/0xbf (CPX-SP A1) microcode from revision 0x7002402
up to 0x7002501;
Update of 06-5c-09/0x03 (APL D0) microcode from revision 0x46 up
to 0x48;
Update of 06-5e-03/0x36 (SKL-H/S/Xeon E3 N0/R0/S0) microcode from
revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-5f-01/0x01 (DNV B0) microcode from revision 0x36 up
to 0x38;
Update of 06-6a-06/0x87 (ICX-SP D0) microcode from revision 0xd000331
up to 0xd000363;
Update of 06-7a-01/0x01 (GLK B0) microcode from revision 0x38 up
to 0x3a;
Update of 06-7a-08/0x01 (GLK-R R0) microcode from revision 0x1c up
to 0x1e;
Update of 06-7e-05/0x80 (ICL-U/Y D1) microcode from revision 0xa8
up to 0xb0;
Update of 06-8a-01/0x10 (LKF B2/B3) microcode from revision 0x2d up
to 0x31;
Update of 06-8c-01/0x80 (TGL-UP3/UP4 B1) microcode from revision
0x9a up to 0xa4;
Update of 06-8c-02/0xc2 (TGL-R C0) microcode from revision 0x22 up
to 0x26;
Update of 06-8d-01/0xc2 (TGL-H R0) microcode from revision 0x3c up
to 0x3e;
Update of 06-8e-09/0x10 (AML-Y 2+2 H0) microcode from revision 0xec
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-09/0xc0 (KBL-U/U 2+3e/Y H0/J1) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-0a/0xc0 (CFL-U 4+3e D0, KBL-R Y0) microcode from
revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-0b/0xd0 (WHL-U W0) microcode from revision 0xec up
to 0xf0;
Update of 06-8e-0c/0x94 (AML-Y 4+2 V0, CML-U 4+2 V0, WHL-U V0)
microcode from revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-96-01/0x01 (EHL B1) microcode from revision 0x15 up
to 0x16;
Update of 06-9c-00/0x01 (JSL A0/A1) microcode from revision 0x2400001f
up to 0x24000023;
Update of 06-9e-09/0x2a (KBL-G/H/S/X/Xeon E3 B0) microcode from
revision 0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0a/0x22 (CFL-H/S/Xeon E U0) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0b/0x02 (CFL-E/H/S B0) microcode from revision 0xec
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0c/0x22 (CFL-H/S/Xeon E P0) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-9e-0d/0x22 (CFL-H/S/Xeon E R0) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a5-02/0x20 (CML-H R1) microcode from revision 0xec up
to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a5-03/0x22 (CML-S 6+2 G1) microcode from revision 0xec
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a5-05/0x22 (CML-S 10+2 Q0) microcode from revision 0xee
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a6-00/0x80 (CML-U 6+2 A0) microcode from revision 0xea
up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a6-01/0x80 (CML-U 6+2 v2 K1) microcode from revision
0xec up to 0xf0;
Update of 06-a7-01/0x02 (RKL-S B0) microcode from revision 0x50 up
to 0x53.
Addresses CVE-2022-0005, CVE-2022-21131, CVE-2022-21136, CVE-2022-21151

Update to upstream 2.1-35. 20220419
Update of 06-5c-0a/0x03 (APL B1/F1) microcode from revision 0x24 up to 0x28.

Read More