From a2823830a6f869ecf4e853b0f52a0e771c71de23 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "github-actions[bot]" <41898282+github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Wed, 8 Apr 2026 20:10:38 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] chore: create doc/ in -build branch MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit built from commit 2b1389e5c667a3c10c8e47fca7cb14d81695165c dated 2026-04-08 21:57:03 +0200 by Stéphane Lesimple (speed47_github@speed47.net) --- .github/workflows/build.yml | 78 ++- README.md | 45 +- doc/FAQ.md | 145 +++++ doc/UNSUPPORTED_CVE_LIST.md | 298 +++++++++++ doc/batch_json.md | 373 +++++++++++++ doc/batch_json.schema.json | 346 ++++++++++++ doc/batch_nrpe.md | 149 ++++++ doc/batch_prometheus.md | 377 +++++++++++++ spectre-meltdown-checker.sh | 1007 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------- 9 files changed, 2597 insertions(+), 221 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/FAQ.md create mode 100644 doc/UNSUPPORTED_CVE_LIST.md create mode 100644 doc/batch_json.md create mode 100644 doc/batch_json.schema.json create mode 100644 doc/batch_nrpe.md create mode 100644 doc/batch_prometheus.md diff --git a/.github/workflows/build.yml b/.github/workflows/build.yml index efd33cd..3e5ff26 100644 --- a/.github/workflows/build.yml +++ b/.github/workflows/build.yml @@ -25,21 +25,81 @@ jobs: mv spectre-meltdown-checker.sh dist/ - name: check direct execution run: | + set -x expected=$(cat .github/workflows/expected_cve_count) cd dist - nb=$(sudo ./spectre-meltdown-checker.sh --batch json | jq '.[]|.CVE' | wc -l) + + json=$(sudo ./spectre-meltdown-checker.sh --batch json || true) + + # Validate JSON is well-formed (and show it if not) + echo "$json" | jq . >/dev/null || { + echo "Invalid JSON produced by spectre-meltdown-checker.sh" + echo "$json" + exit 1 + } + + # Validate required keys exist + for key in meta system cpu cpu_microcode vulnerabilities; do + echo "$json" | jq -e ".$key" >/dev/null || { + echo "Missing top-level key: $key" + echo "$json" | jq . + exit 1 + } + done + + # Use -r to get raw scalars (no quotes) + fmtver=$(echo "$json" | jq -r '.meta.format_version // empty') + if [ "$fmtver" != "1" ]; then + echo "Unexpected format_version: $fmtver" + echo "$json" | jq . + exit 1 + fi + + run_as_root=$(echo "$json" | jq -r '.meta.run_as_root // empty') + if [ "$run_as_root" != "true" ]; then + echo "Expected run_as_root=true, got: $run_as_root" + echo "$json" | jq . + exit 1 + fi + + mocked=$(echo "$json" | jq -r '.meta.mocked // "false"') + if [ "$mocked" = "true" ]; then + echo "mocked=true must never appear in production" + echo "$json" | jq . + exit 1 + fi + + # Count CVEs robustly (as a number) + nb=$(echo "$json" | jq -r '[.vulnerabilities[].cve] | length') if [ "$nb" -ne "$expected" ]; then echo "Invalid number of CVEs reported: $nb instead of $expected" + echo "$json" | jq '.vulnerabilities[].cve' exit 1 else echo "OK $nb CVEs reported" fi + + # Validate json-terse backward compatibility + nb_terse=$(sudo ./spectre-meltdown-checker.sh --batch json-terse | jq -r 'map(.CVE) | length') + if [ "$nb_terse" -ne "$expected" ]; then + echo "json-terse backward compat broken: $nb_terse CVEs instead of $expected" + exit 1 + else + echo "OK json-terse backward compat: $nb_terse CVEs" + fi - name: check docker compose run execution run: | expected=$(cat .github/workflows/expected_cve_count) cd dist docker compose build - nb=$(docker compose run --rm spectre-meltdown-checker --batch json | jq '.[]|.CVE' | wc -l) + json=$(docker compose run --rm spectre-meltdown-checker --batch json || true) + echo "$json" | jq . > /dev/null + fmtver=$(echo "$json" | jq '.meta.format_version') + if [ "$fmtver" != "1" ]; then + echo "Unexpected format_version: $fmtver" + exit 1 + fi + nb=$(echo "$json" | jq '.vulnerabilities[].cve' | wc -l) if [ "$nb" -ne "$expected" ]; then echo "Invalid number of CVEs reported: $nb instead of $expected" exit 1 @@ -51,7 +111,14 @@ jobs: expected=$(cat .github/workflows/expected_cve_count) cd dist docker build -t spectre-meltdown-checker . - nb=$(docker run --rm --privileged -v /boot:/boot:ro -v /dev/cpu:/dev/cpu:ro -v /lib/modules:/lib/modules:ro spectre-meltdown-checker --batch json | jq '.[]|.CVE' | wc -l) + json=$(docker run --rm --privileged -v /boot:/boot:ro -v /dev/cpu:/dev/cpu:ro -v /lib/modules:/lib/modules:ro spectre-meltdown-checker --batch json || true) + echo "$json" | jq . > /dev/null + fmtver=$(echo "$json" | jq '.meta.format_version') + if [ "$fmtver" != "1" ]; then + echo "Unexpected format_version: $fmtver" + exit 1 + fi + nb=$(echo "$json" | jq '.vulnerabilities[].cve' | wc -l) if [ "$nb" -ne "$expected" ]; then echo "Invalid number of CVEs reported: $nb instead of $expected" exit 1 @@ -92,15 +159,18 @@ jobs: fi - name: create a pull request to ${{ github.ref_name }}-build run: | + # all the files in dist/* and .github/* must be moved as is to the -build branch root, move them out for now: tmpdir=$(mktemp -d) mv ./dist/* .github $tmpdir/ rm -rf ./dist + git fetch origin ${{ github.ref_name }}-build git checkout -f ${{ github.ref_name }}-build mv $tmpdir/* . - rm -rf src/ + rm -rf src/ scripts/ img/ mkdir -p .github rsync -vaP --delete $tmpdir/.github/ .github/ + git add --all echo =#=#= DIFF CACHED git diff --cached diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 320d332..69d176f 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -214,17 +214,17 @@ A race condition in the branch predictor update mechanism of Intel processors (C Several transient execution CVEs are not covered by this tool, for various reasons (duplicates, only affecting non-supported hardware or OS, theoretical with no known exploitation, etc.). The complete list along with the reason for each exclusion is available in the -[UNSUPPORTED_CVE_LIST.md](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/blob/source/UNSUPPORTED_CVE_LIST.md) file. +[UNSUPPORTED_CVE_LIST.md](doc/UNSUPPORTED_CVE_LIST.md) file. ## Scope Supported operating systems: - Linux (all versions, flavors and distros) -- FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFlyBSD and derivatives (others BSDs are [not supported](FAQ.md#which-bsd-oses-are-supported)) +- FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFlyBSD and derivatives (others BSDs are [not supported](doc/FAQ.md#which-bsd-oses-are-supported)) -For Linux systems, the tool will detect mitigations, including backported non-vanilla patches, regardless of the advertised kernel version number and the distribution (such as Debian, Ubuntu, CentOS, RHEL, Fedora, openSUSE, Arch, ...), it also works if you've compiled your own kernel. More information [here](FAQ.md#how-does-this-script-work). +For Linux systems, the tool will detect mitigations, including backported non-vanilla patches, regardless of the advertised kernel version number and the distribution (such as Debian, Ubuntu, CentOS, RHEL, Fedora, openSUSE, Arch, ...), it also works if you've compiled your own kernel. More information [here](doc/FAQ.md#how-does-this-script-work). -Other operating systems such as MacOS, Windows, ESXi, etc. [will never be supported](FAQ.md#why-is-my-os-not-supported). +Other operating systems such as MacOS, Windows, ESXi, etc. [will never be supported](doc/FAQ.md#why-is-my-os-not-supported). Supported architectures: - `x86` (32 bits) @@ -236,7 +236,29 @@ Supported architectures: What is the purpose of this tool? Why was it written? How can it be useful to me? How does it work? What can I expect from it? -All these questions (and more) have detailed answers in the [FAQ](FAQ.md), please have a look! +All these questions (and more) have detailed answers in the [FAQ](doc/FAQ.md), please have a look! + +## Operating modes + +The script supports four operating modes, depending on whether you want to inspect the running kernel, a kernel image, the CPU hardware, or a combination. + +| Mode | Flag | CPU hardware | Running kernel | Kernel image | Use case | +|------|------|:---:|:---:|:---:|----------| +| **Live** *(default)* | *(none)* | Yes | Yes | auto-detect | Day-to-day auditing of the current system | +| **No-runtime** | `--no-runtime` | Yes | No | required | Check a different kernel against this CPU (e.g. pre-deployment) | +| **No-hardware** | `--no-hw` | No | No | required | Pure static analysis of a kernel image for another system or architecture | +| **Hardware-only** | `--hw-only` | Yes | No | No | Quickly check CPU affectedness without inspecting any kernel | + +In **Live** mode (the default), the script inspects both the CPU and the running kernel. +You can optionally pass `--kernel`, `--config`, or `--map` to point the script at files it couldn't auto-detect. + +In **No-runtime** mode, the script still reads the local CPU (CPUID, MSRs, microcode) but skips all running-kernel artifacts (`/sys`, `/proc`, `dmesg`). +Use this when you have a kernel image from another system but want to evaluate it against the current CPU. + +In **No-hardware** mode, both CPU inspection and running-kernel artifacts are skipped entirely. +This is useful for cross-architecture analysis, for example inspecting an ARM kernel image on an x86 workstation. + +In **Hardware-only** mode, the script only reports CPU information and per-CVE hardware affectedness, without inspecting any kernel. ## Running the script @@ -288,15 +310,6 @@ docker run --rm --privileged -v /boot:/boot:ro -v /dev/cpu:/dev/cpu:ro -v /lib/m ## Example of script output -- Intel Haswell CPU running under Ubuntu 16.04 LTS - -![haswell](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/218502/108764885-6dcfc380-7553-11eb-81ac-4d19060a3acf.png) - -- AMD Ryzen running under OpenSUSE Tumbleweed - -![ryzen](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/218502/108764896-70321d80-7553-11eb-9dd2-fad2a0a1a737.png) - -- Batch mode (JSON flavor) - -![batch](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/218502/108764902-71634a80-7553-11eb-9678-fd304995fa64.png) +- AMD EPYC-Milan running under Debian Trixie +![alt text](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/refs/heads/test/img/smc_amd_epyc_milan.jpg) diff --git a/doc/FAQ.md b/doc/FAQ.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..af0922e --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/FAQ.md @@ -0,0 +1,145 @@ +# Questions + +- [What to expect from this tool?](#what-to-expect-from-this-tool) +- [Why was this script written in the first place?](#why-was-this-script-written-in-the-first-place) +- [Why are those vulnerabilities so different than regular CVEs?](#why-are-those-vulnerabilities-so-different-than-regular-cves) +- [What do "affected", "vulnerable" and "mitigated" mean exactly?](#what-do-affected-vulnerable-and-mitigated-mean-exactly) +- [What are the main design decisions regarding this script?](#what-are-the-main-design-decisions-regarding-this-script) +- [Everything is indicated in `sysfs` now, is this script still useful?](#everything-is-indicated-in-sysfs-now-is-this-script-still-useful) +- [How does this script work?](#how-does-this-script-work) +- [Which BSD OSes are supported?](#which-bsd-oses-are-supported) +- [Why is my OS not supported?](#why-is-my-os-not-supported) +- [The tool says there is an updated microcode for my CPU, but I don't have it!](#the-tool-says-there-is-an-updated-microcode-for-my-cpu-but-i-dont-have-it) +- [The tool says that I need a more up-to-date microcode, but I have the more recent version!](#the-tool-says-that-i-need-a-more-up-to-date-microcode-but-i-have-the-more-recent-version) +- [Which rules are governing the support of a CVE in this tool?](#which-rules-are-governing-the-support-of-a-cve-in-this-tool) + +# Answers + +## What to expect from this tool? + +This tool does its best to determine where your system stands on each of the collectively named [transient execution](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transient_execution_CPU_vulnerability) vulnerabilities (also sometimes called "speculative execution" vulnerabilities) that were made public since early 2018. It doesn't attempt to run any kind of exploit, and can't guarantee that your system is secure, but rather helps you verifying if your system is affected, and if it is, checks whether it has the known mitigations in place to avoid being vulnerable. +Some mitigations could also exist in your kernel that this script doesn't know (yet) how to detect, or it might falsely detect mitigations that in the end don't work as expected (for example, on backported or modified kernels). + +Please also note that for Spectre vulnerabilities, all software can possibly be exploited, this tool only verifies that the kernel (which is the core of the system) you're using has the proper protections in place. Verifying all the other software is out of the scope of this tool. As a general measure, ensure you always have the most up to date stable versions of all the software you use, especially for those who are exposed to the world, such as network daemons and browsers. + +This tool has been released in the hope that it'll be useful, but don't use it to jump to definitive conclusions about your security: hardware vulnerabilities are [complex beasts](#why-are-those-vulnerabilities-so-different-than-regular-cves), and collective understanding of each vulnerability is evolving with time. + +## Why was this script written in the first place? + +The first commit of this script is dated *2018-01-07*, only 4 days after the world first heard about the Meltdown and the Spectre attacks. With those attacks disclosure, a _whole new range of vulnerabilities_ that were previously thought to be mostly theoretical and only possible in very controlled environments (labs) - hence of little interest for most except researchers - suddenly became completely mainstream and apparently trivial to conduct on an immensely large number of systems. + +On the few hours and days after that date, the whole industry went crazy. Proper, verified information about these vulnerabilities was incredibly hard to find, because before this, even the CPU vendors never had to deal with managing security vulnerabilities at scale, as software vendors do since decades. There were a lot of FUD, and the apparent silence of the vendors was enough for most to fear the worst. The whole industry had everything to learn about this new type of vulnerabilities. However, most systems administrators had a few simple questions: + +- Am **I** vulnerable? And if yes, +- What do I have to do to mitigate these vulnerabilities on **my** system? + +Unfortunately, answering those questions was very difficult (and still is to some extent), even if the safe answer to the first question was "you probably are". This script was written to try to give simple answers to those simple questions, and was made to evolve as the information about these vulnerabilities became available. On the first few days, there was several new versions published **per day**. + +## Why are those vulnerabilities so different than regular CVEs? + +Those are hardware vulnerabilities, while most of the CVEs we see everyday are software vulnerabilities. A quick comparison would be: + +Software vulnerability: +- Can be fixed? Yes. +- How to fix? Update the software (or uninstall it!) + +Hardware vulnerability: +- Can be fixed? No, only mitigated (or buy new hardware!) +- How to ~~fix~~ mitigate? In the worst case scenario, 5 "layers" need to be updated: the microcode/firmware, the host OS kernel, the hypervisor, the VM OS kernel, and possibly all the software running on the machine. Sometimes only a subset of those layers need to be updated. In yet other cases, there can be several possible mitigations for the same vulnerability, implying different layers. Yes, it can get horribly complicated. + +A more detailed video explanation is available here: https://youtu.be/2gB9U1EcCss?t=425 + +## What do "affected", "vulnerable" and "mitigated" mean exactly? + +- **Affected** means that your CPU's hardware, as it went out of the factory, is known to be concerned by a specific vulnerability, i.e. the vulnerability applies to your hardware model. Note that it says nothing about whether a given vulnerability can actually be used to exploit your system. However, an unaffected CPU will never be vulnerable, and doesn't need to have mitigations in place. +- **Vulnerable** implies that you're using an **affected** CPU, and means that a given vulnerability can be exploited on your system, because no (or insufficient) mitigations are in place. +- **Mitigated** implies that a previously **vulnerable** system has followed all the steps (updated all the required layers) to ensure a given vulnerability cannot be exploited. About what "layers" mean, see [the previous question](#why-are-those-vulnerabilities-so-different-than-regular-cves). + +## What are the main design decisions regarding this script? + +There are a few rules that govern how this tool is written. + +1) It should be okay to run this script in a production environment. This implies, but is not limited to: + + * 1a. Never modify the system it's running on, and if it needs to e.g. load a kernel module it requires, that wasn't loaded before it was launched, it'll take care to unload it on exit + * 1b. Never attempt to "fix" or "mitigate" any vulnerability, or modify any configuration. It just reports what it thinks is the status of your system. It leaves all decisions to the sysadmin. + * 1c. Never attempt to run any kind of exploit to tell whether a vulnerability is mitigated, because it would violate 1a), could lead to unpredictable system behavior, and might even lead to wrong conclusions, as some PoC must be compiled with specific options and prerequisites, otherwise giving wrong information (especially for Spectre). If you want to run PoCs, do it yourself, but please read carefully about the PoC and the vulnerability. PoCs about a hardware vulnerability are way more complicated and prone to false conclusions than PoCs for software vulnerabilities. + +2) Never look at the kernel version to tell whether it supports mitigation for a given vulnerability. This implies never hardcoding version numbers in the script. This would defeat the purpose: this script should be able to detect mitigations in unknown kernels, with possibly backported or forward-ported patches. Also, don't believe what `sysfs` says, when possible. See the next question about this. + +3) Never look at the microcode version to tell whether it has the proper mechanisms in place to support mitigation for a given vulnerability. This implies never hardcoding version numbers in the script. Instead, look for said mechanisms, as the kernel would do. + +4) When a CPU is not known to be explicitly unaffected by a vulnerability, make the assumption that it is. This strong design choice has it roots in the early speculative execution vulnerability days (see [this answer](#why-was-this-script-written-in-the-first-place)), and is still a good approach as of today. + +## Everything is indicated in `sysfs` now, is this script still useful? + +A lot as changed since 2018. Nowadays, the industry adapted and this range of vulnerabilities is almost "business as usual", as software vulnerabilities are. However, due to their complexity, it's still not as easy as just checking a version number to ensure a vulnerability is closed. + +Granted, we now have a standard way under Linux to check whether our system is affected, vulnerable, mitigated against most of these vulnerabilities. By having a look at the `sysfs` hierarchy, and more precisely the `/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/` folder, one can have a pretty good insight about its system state for each of the listed vulnerabilities. Note that the output can be a little different with some vendors (e.g. Red Hat has some slightly different output than the vanilla kernel for some vulnerabilities), but it's still a gigantic leap forward, given where we were in 2018 when this script was started, and it's very good news. The kernel is the proper place to have this because the kernel knows everything about itself (the mitigations it might have), and the CPU (its model, and microcode features that are exposed). Note however that some vulnerabilities are not reported through this file hierarchy at all, such as Zenbleed. + +However I see a few reasons why this script might still be useful to you, and that's why its development has not halted when the `sysfs` hierarchy came out: + +- A given version of the kernel doesn't have knowledge about the future. To put it in another way: a given version of the kernel only has the understanding of a vulnerability available at the time it was compiled. Let me explain this: when a new vulnerability comes out, new versions of the microcode and kernels are released, with mitigations in place. With such a kernel, a new `sysfs` entry will appear. However, after a few weeks or months, corner cases can be discovered, previously-thought unaffected CPUs can turn out to be affected in the end, and sometimes mitigations can end up being insufficient. Of course, if you're always running the latest kernel version from kernel.org, this issue might be limited for you. The spectre-meltdown-checker script doesn't depend on a kernel's knowledge and understanding of a vulnerability to compute its output. That is, unless you tell it to (using the `--sysfs-only` option). + +- Mitigating a vulnerability completely can sometimes be tricky, and have a lot of complicated prerequisites, depending on your kernel version, CPU vendor, model and even sometimes stepping, CPU microcode, hypervisor support, etc. The script gives a very detailed insight about each of the prerequisites of mitigation for every vulnerability, step by step, hence pointing out what is missing on your system as a whole to completely mitigate an issue. + +- The script can be pointed at a kernel image, and will deep dive into it, telling you if this kernel will mitigate vulnerabilities that might be present on your system. This is a good way to verify before booting a new kernel, that it'll mitigate the vulnerabilities you expect it to, especially if you modified a few config options around these topics. + +- The script will also work regardless of the custom patches that might be integrated in the kernel you're running (or you're pointing it to, in offline mode), and completely ignores the advertised kernel version, to tell whether a given kernel mitigates vulnerabilities. This is especially useful for non-vanilla kernel, where patches might be backported, sometimes silently (this has already happened, too). + +- Educational purposes: the script gives interesting insights about a vulnerability, and how the different parts of the system work together to mitigate it. + +There are probably other reasons, but that are the main ones that come to mind. In the end, of course, only you can tell whether it's useful for your use case ;) + +## How does this script work? + +On one hand, the script gathers information about your CPU, and the features exposed by its microcode. To do this, it uses the low-level CPUID instruction (through the `cpuid` kernel module under Linux, and the `cpucontrol` tool under BSD), and queries to the MSR registers of your CPU (through the `msr` kernel module under Linux, and the `cpucontrol` tool under BSD). + +On another hand, the script looks into the kernel image your system is running on, for clues about the mitigations it supports. Of course, this is very specific for each operating system, even if the implemented mitigation is functionally the same, the actual code is completely specific. As you can imagine, the Linux kernel code has a few in common with a BSD kernel code, for example. Under Linux, the script supports looking into the kernel image, and possibly the System.map and kernel config file, if these are available. Under BSD, it looks into the kernel file only. + +Then, for each vulnerability it knows about, the script decides whether your system is [affected, vulnerable, and mitigated](#what-do-affected-vulnerable-and-mitigated-mean-exactly) against it, using the information it gathered about your hardware and your kernel. + +## Which BSD OSes are supported? + +For the BSD range of operating systems, the script will work as long as the BSD you're using supports `cpuctl` and `linprocfs`. This is not the case for OpenBSD for example. Known BSD flavors having proper support are: FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonflyBSD. Derivatives of those should also work. To know why other BSDs will likely never be supported, see [why is my OS not supported?](#why-is-my-os-not-supported). + +## Why is my OS not supported? + +This tool only supports Linux, and [some flavors of BSD](#which-bsd-oses-are-supported). Other OSes will most likely never be supported, due to [how this script works](#how-does-this-script-work). It would require implementing these OSes specific way of querying the CPU. It would also require to get documentation (if available) about how this OS mitigates each vulnerability, down to this OS kernel code, and if documentation is not available, reverse-engineer the difference between a known old version of a kernel, and a kernel that mitigates a new vulnerability. This means that all the effort has to be duplicated times the number of supported OSes, as everything is specific, by construction. It also implies having a deep understanding of every OS, which takes years to develop. However, if/when other tools appear for other OSes, that share the same goal of this one, they might be listed here as a convenience. + +## The tool says there is an updated microcode for my CPU, but I don't have it! + +Even if your operating system is fully up to date, the tool might still tell you that there is a more recent microcode version for your CPU. Currently, it uses (and merges) information from 4 sources: + +- The official [Intel microcode repository](https://github.com/intel/Intel-Linux-Processor-Microcode-Data-Files) +- The awesome platomav's [MCExtractor database](https://github.com/platomav/MCExtractor) for non-Intel CPUs +- The official [linux-firmware](https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/firmware/linux-firmware.git) repository for AMD +- Specific Linux kernel commits that sometimes hardcode microcode versions, such as for [Zenbleed](https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=522b1d69219d8f083173819fde04f994aa051a98) or for the bad [Spectre](https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/arch/x86/kernel/cpu/intel.c#n141) microcodes + +Generally, it means a more recent version of the microcode has been seen in the wild. However, fully public availability of this microcode might be limited yet, or your OS vendor might have chosen not to ship this new version (yet), maybe because it's currently being tested, or for other reasons. This tool can't tell you when or if this will be the case. You should ask your vendor about it. Technically, you can still go and upgrade your microcode yourself, and use this tool to confirm whether you did it successfully. Updating the microcode for you is out of the scope of this tool, as this would violate [rule 1b](#what-are-the-main-design-decisions-regarding-this-script). + +## The tool says that I need a more up-to-date microcode, but I have the more recent version! + +This can happen for a few reasons: + +- Your CPU is no longer supported by the vendor. In that case, new versions of the microcode will never be published, and vulnerabilities requiring microcode features will never be fixed. On most of these vulnerabilities, you'll have no way to mitigate the issue on a vulnerable system, appart from buying a more recent CPU. Sometimes, you might be able to mitigate the issue by disabling a CPU feature instead (often at the cost of speed). When this is the case, the script will list this as one of the possible mitigations for the vulnerability. + +- The vulnerability is recent, and your CPU has not yet received a microcode update for the vendor. Often, these updates come in batches, and it can take several batches to cover all the supported CPUs. + +In both cases, you can contact your vendor to know whether there'll be an update or not, and if yes, when. For Intel, at the time this FAQ entry was written, such guidance was [available here](https://software.intel.com/content/www/us/en/develop/topics/software-security-guidance/processors-affected-consolidated-product-cpu-model.html). + +## Which rules are governing the support of a CVE in this tool? + +On the early days, it was easy: just Spectre and Meltdown (hence the tool name), because that's all we had. Now that this range of vulnerability is seeing a bunch of newcomers every year, this question is legitimate. + +To stick with this tool's goal, a good indication as to why a CVE should be supported, is when mitigating it requires either kernel modifications, microcode modifications, or both. + +Counter-examples include (non-exhaustive list): + +- [CVE-2019-14615](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/340), mitigating this issue is done by updating the Intel driver. This is out of the scope of this tool. +- [CVE-2019-15902](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/304), this CVE is due to a bad backport in the stable kernel. If the faulty backport was part of the mitigation of another supported CVE, and this bad backport was detectable (without hardcoding kernel versions, see [rule 2](#why-are-those-vulnerabilities-so-different-than-regular-cves)), it might have been added as a bullet point in the concerned CVE's section in the tool. However, this wasn't the case. +- The "[Take A Way](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/344)" vulnerability, AMD said that they believe this is not a new attack, hence there were no microcode and no kernel modification made. As there is nothing to look for, this is out of the scope of this tool. +- [CVE-2020-0550](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/347), the vendor thinks this is hardly exploitable in the wild, and as mitigations would be too performance impacting, as a whole the industry decided to not address it. As there is nothing to check for, this is out of the scope of this tool. +- [CVE-2020-0551](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/348), the industry decided to not address it, as it is believed mitigations for other CVEs render this attack practically hard to make, Intel just released an updated SDK for SGX to help mitigate the issue, but this is out of the scope of this tool. + +Look for the [information](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3Ainformation) tag in the issues list for more examples. diff --git a/doc/UNSUPPORTED_CVE_LIST.md b/doc/UNSUPPORTED_CVE_LIST.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..12330b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/UNSUPPORTED_CVE_LIST.md @@ -0,0 +1,298 @@ +# Unsupported CVEs + +This document lists transient execution CVEs that have been evaluated and determined to be **out of scope** for this tool. See the [Which rules are governing the support of a CVE in this tool?](dist/FAQ.md#which-rules-are-governing-the-support-of-a-cve-in-this-tool) section in the FAQ for the general policy. + +CVEs are grouped by reason for exclusion: + +- [Already covered by an existing CVE check](#already-covered-by-an-existing-cve-check) — subvariants or subsets whose mitigations are already detected under a parent CVE. +- [No kernel or microcode mitigations to check](#no-kernel-or-microcode-mitigations-to-check) — no fix has been issued, or the mitigation is not detectable by this tool. +- [Not a transient/speculative execution vulnerability](#not-a-transientspeculative-execution-vulnerability) — wrong vulnerability class entirely. + +--- + +# Already covered by an existing CVE check + +These CVEs are subvariants or subsets of vulnerabilities already implemented in the tool. Their mitigations are detected as part of the parent CVE's checks. + +## CVE-2018-3693 — Bounds Check Bypass Store (Spectre v1.1) + +- **Issue:** [#236](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/236) +- **Red Hat advisory:** [Speculative Store Bypass / Bounds Check Bypass (CVE-2018-3693)](https://access.redhat.com/solutions/3523601) +- **CVSS:** 5.6 (Medium) +- **Covered by:** CVE-2017-5753 (Spectre V1) + +A subvariant of Spectre V1 where speculative store operations can write beyond validated buffer boundaries before the bounds check resolves, allowing an attacker to alter cache state and leak information via side channels. + +**Why out of scope:** The mitigations are identical to CVE-2017-5753 (Spectre V1): `lfence` instructions after bounds checks and `array_index_nospec()` barriers in kernel code. There is no separate sysfs entry, no new CPU feature flag, and no distinct microcode change. This tool's existing CVE-2017-5753 checks already detect these mitigations (`__user pointer sanitization`, `usercopy/swapgs barriers`), so CVE-2018-3693 is fully covered as part of Spectre V1. + +## CVE-2018-15572 — SpectreRSB (Return Stack Buffer) + +- **Issue:** [#224](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/224) +- **Research paper:** [Spectre Returns! Speculation Attacks using the Return Stack Buffer (WOOT'18)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1807.07940) +- **Kernel fix:** [commit fdf82a7856b3](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/fdf82a7856b32d905c39afc85e34364491e46346) (Linux 4.18.1) +- **CVSS:** 6.5 (Medium) +- **Covered by:** CVE-2017-5715 (Spectre V2) + +The `spectre_v2_select_mitigation` function in the Linux kernel before 4.18.1 did not always fill the RSB upon a context switch, allowing userspace-to-userspace SpectreRSB attacks on Skylake+ CPUs where an empty RSB falls back to the BTB. + +**Why out of scope:** This CVE is a Spectre V2 mitigation gap (missing RSB filling on context switch), not a distinct hardware vulnerability. It is already fully covered by this tool's CVE-2017-5715 (Spectre V2) checks, which detect whether the kernel performs RSB filling on CPUs vulnerable to RSB underflow (Skylake+ and RSBA-capable CPUs). A missing RSB fill is flagged as a caveat ("RSB filling missing on Skylake+") in the Spectre V2 verdict. + +## CVE-2019-1125 — Spectre SWAPGS gadget + +- **Issue:** [#301](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/301) +- **Kernel fix:** [commit 18ec54fdd6d1](https://github.com/torvalds/linux/commit/18ec54fdd6d18d92025af097cd042a75cf0ea24c) (Linux 5.3) +- **CVSS:** 5.6 (Medium) +- **Covered by:** CVE-2017-5753 (Spectre V1) + +A Spectre V1 subvariant where the `SWAPGS` instruction can be speculatively executed on x86 CPUs, allowing an attacker to leak kernel memory via a side channel on the GS segment base value. + +**Why out of scope:** This is a Spectre V1 subvariant whose mitigation (SWAPGS barriers) shares the same sysfs entry as CVE-2017-5753. This tool's existing CVE-2017-5753 checks already detect SWAPGS barriers: a mitigated kernel reports `"Mitigation: usercopy/swapgs barriers and __user pointer sanitization"`, while a kernel lacking the fix reports `"Vulnerable: __user pointer sanitization and usercopy barriers only; no swapgs barriers"`. CVE-2019-1125 is therefore fully covered as part of Spectre V1. + +## CVE-2021-26341 — AMD Straight-Line Speculation (direct branches) + +- **Bulletin:** [AMD-SB-1026](https://www.amd.com/en/resources/product-security/bulletin/amd-sb-1026.html) +- **Affected CPUs:** AMD Zen 1, Zen 2 +- **CVSS:** 6.5 (Medium) +- **Covered by:** CVE-0000-0001 (SLS supplementary check) + +AMD Zen 1/Zen 2 CPUs may transiently execute instructions beyond unconditional direct branches (JMP, CALL), potentially allowing information disclosure via side channels. + +**Why out of scope:** This is the AMD-specific direct-branch subset of the broader Straight-Line Speculation (SLS) class. The kernel mitigates it via `CONFIG_MITIGATION_SLS` (formerly `CONFIG_SLS`), which enables the GCC flag `-mharden-sls=all` to insert INT3 after unconditional control flow instructions. Since this is a compile-time-only mitigation with no sysfs interface, no MSR, and no per-CVE CPU feature flag, it cannot be checked using the standard CVE framework. A supplementary SLS check is available via `--extra` mode, which covers this CVE's mitigation as well. + +## CVE-2020-13844 — ARM Straight-Line Speculation + +- **Advisory:** [ARM Developer Security Update (June 2020)](https://developer.arm.com/Arm%20Security%20Center/Speculative%20Processor%20Vulnerability) +- **Affected CPUs:** Cortex-A32, A34, A35, A53, A57, A72, A73, and broadly all speculative Armv8-A cores +- **CVSS:** 5.5 (Medium) +- **Covered by:** CVE-0000-0001 (SLS supplementary check) + +ARM processors may speculatively execute instructions past unconditional control flow changes (RET, BR, BLR). GCC and Clang support `-mharden-sls=all` for aarch64, but the Linux kernel never merged the patches to enable it: a `CONFIG_HARDEN_SLS_ALL` series was submitted in 2021 but rejected upstream. + +**Why out of scope:** This is the ARM-specific subset of the broader Straight-Line Speculation (SLS) class. The supplementary SLS check available via `--extra` mode detects affected ARM CPU models and reports that no kernel mitigation is currently available. + +## CVE-2024-2201 — Native BHI (Branch History Injection without eBPF) + +- **Issue:** [#491](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/491) +- **Research:** [InSpectre Gadget / Native BHI (VUSec)](https://www.vusec.net/projects/native-bhi/) +- **Intel advisory:** [Branch History Injection (Intel)](https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/developer/articles/technical/software-security-guidance/technical-documentation/branch-history-injection.html) +- **Affected CPUs:** Intel CPUs with eIBRS (Ice Lake+, 10th gen+, and virtualized Intel guests) +- **CVSS:** 4.7 (Medium) +- **Covered by:** CVE-2017-5715 (Spectre V2) + +VUSec researchers demonstrated that the original BHI mitigation (disabling unprivileged eBPF) was insufficient: 1,511 native kernel gadgets exist that allow exploiting Branch History Injection without eBPF, leaking arbitrary kernel memory at ~3.5 kB/sec on Intel CPUs. + +**Why out of scope:** CVE-2024-2201 is not a new hardware vulnerability — it is the same BHI hardware bug as CVE-2022-0002, but proves that eBPF restriction alone was never sufficient. The required mitigations are identical: `BHI_DIS_S` hardware control (MSR `IA32_SPEC_CTRL` bit 10), software BHB clearing loop at syscall entry and VM exit, or retpoline with RRSBA disabled. These are all already detected by this tool's CVE-2017-5715 (Spectre V2) checks, which parse the `BHI:` suffix from `/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/spectre_v2` and check for `CONFIG_MITIGATION_SPECTRE_BHI` in offline mode. No new sysfs entry, MSR, kernel config option, or boot parameter was introduced for this CVE. + +## CVE-2020-0549 — L1D Eviction Sampling (CacheOut) + +- **Issue:** [#341](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/341) +- **Advisory:** [INTEL-SA-00329](https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/developer/articles/technical/software-security-guidance/advisory-guidance/l1d-eviction-sampling.html) +- **Affected CPUs:** Intel Skylake through 10th gen (Tiger Lake+ not affected) +- **CVSS:** 6.5 (Medium) +- **Covered by:** CVE-2018-12126 / CVE-2018-12127 / CVE-2018-12130 / CVE-2019-11091 (MDS) and CVE-2018-3646 (L1TF) + +An Intel-specific data leakage vulnerability where L1 data cache evictions can be exploited in combination with MDS or TAA side channels to leak data across security boundaries. + +**Why out of scope:** The June 2020 microcode update that addresses this CVE does not introduce any new MSR bits or CPUID flags — it reuses the existing MD_CLEAR (`CPUID.7.0:EDX[10]`) and L1D_FLUSH (`MSR_IA32_FLUSH_CMD`, 0x10B) infrastructure already deployed for MDS and L1TF. The Linux kernel has no dedicated sysfs entry in `/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/` for this CVE; instead, it provides an opt-in per-task L1D flush via `prctl(PR_SPEC_L1D_FLUSH)` and the `l1d_flush=on` boot parameter, which piggyback on the same L1D flush mechanism checked by the existing L1TF and MDS vulnerability modules. In practice, a system with up-to-date microcode and MDS/L1TF mitigations in place is already protected against L1D Eviction Sampling. + +## CVE-2025-20623 — Shared Microarchitectural Predictor State (10th Gen Intel) + +- **Advisory:** [INTEL-SA-01247](https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/security-center/advisory/intel-sa-01247.html) +- **Affected CPUs:** Intel 10th Generation Core Processors only +- **CVSS:** 5.6 (Medium) +- **Covered by:** CVE-2024-45332 (BPI) + +Shared microarchitectural predictor state on 10th generation Intel CPUs may allow information disclosure. + +**Why out of scope:** Very narrow scope (single CPU generation). Mitigated by the same microcode update as CVE-2024-45332 (BPI) and handled through the existing Spectre V2 framework. No dedicated sysfs entry or kernel mitigation beyond what BPI already provides. + +## CVE-2025-24495 — Lion Cove BPU Initialization + +- **Advisory:** [INTEL-SA-01322](https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/security-center/advisory/intel-sa-01322.html) +- **Research:** [Training Solo (VUSec)](https://www.vusec.net/projects/training-solo/) +- **Affected CPUs:** Intel Core Ultra with Lion Cove core only (Lunar Lake, Arrow Lake) +- **CVSS:** 6.8 (Medium, CVSS v4) +- **Covered by:** CVE-2024-28956 (ITS) + +A branch predictor initialization issue specific to Intel's Lion Cove microarchitecture, discovered as part of the "Training Solo" research. + +**Why out of scope:** This is a subset of the ITS (Indirect Target Selection) vulnerability (CVE-2024-28956). It shares the same sysfs entry (`/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/indirect_target_selection`) and kernel mitigation framework. Since ITS (CVE-2024-28956) is implemented in this tool, Lion Cove BPU is already covered automatically. + +--- + +# No kernel or microcode mitigations to check + +These CVEs are real vulnerabilities, but no kernel or microcode fix has been issued, the mitigation is delegated to individual software, or the fix is not detectable by this tool. + +## CVE-2018-9056 — BranchScope + +- **Issue:** [#169](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/169) +- **Research paper:** [BranchScope (ASPLOS 2018)](http://www.cs.ucr.edu/~nael/pubs/asplos18.pdf) +- **Red Hat bug:** [#1561794](https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1561794) +- **CVSS:** 5.6 (Medium) + +A speculative execution attack exploiting the directional branch predictor, allowing an attacker to infer data by manipulating the shared branch prediction state (pattern history table). Initially demonstrated on Intel processors. + +**Why out of scope:** No kernel or microcode mitigations have been issued. Red Hat closed their tracking bug as "CLOSED CANTFIX", concluding that "this is a hardware processor issue, not a Linux kernel flaw" and that "it is specific to a target software which uses sensitive information in branching expressions." The mitigation responsibility falls on individual software to avoid using sensitive data in conditional branches, which is out of the scope of this tool. + +## CVE-2019-15902 — Spectre V1 backport regression + +- **Issue:** [#304](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/304) +- **CVSS:** 5.6 (Medium) + +A backporting mistake in Linux stable/longterm kernel versions (4.4.x through 4.4.190, 4.9.x through 4.9.190, 4.14.x through 4.14.141, 4.19.x through 4.19.69, and 5.2.x through 5.2.11) swapped two code lines in `ptrace_get_debugreg()`, placing the `array_index_nospec()` call after the array access instead of before, reintroducing a Spectre V1 vulnerability. + +**Why out of scope:** This is a kernel bug (bad backport), not a hardware vulnerability. The flawed code is not detectable on a running kernel without hardcoding kernel version ranges, which is against this tool's design principles. As the tool author noted: "it's going to be almost impossible to detect it on a running kernel." + +## CVE-2020-12965 — Transient Execution of Non-Canonical Accesses (SLAM) + +- **Issue:** [#478](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/478) +- **Bulletin:** [AMD-SB-1010](https://www.amd.com/en/corporate/product-security/bulletin/amd-sb-1010) +- **Research paper:** [SLAM (VUSec)](https://www.vusec.net/projects/slam/) +- **CVSS:** 7.5 (High) + +AMD CPUs may transiently execute non-canonical loads and stores using only the lower 48 address bits, potentially resulting in data leakage. The SLAM research (2023) demonstrated that this could be exploited on existing AMD Zen+/Zen2 CPUs and could also affect future CPUs with Intel LAM, AMD UAI, or ARM TBI features. + +**Why out of scope:** AMD's mitigation guidance is for software vendors to "analyze their code for any potential vulnerabilities" and insert LFENCE or use existing speculation mitigation techniques in their own code. No microcode or kernel-level mitigations have been issued. The responsibility falls on individual software, not on the kernel or firmware, leaving nothing for this script to check. + +## CVE-2020-24511 — Domain-Type Confusion (IBRS Scope) + +- **Issue:** [#409](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/409) +- **Advisory:** [INTEL-SA-00464](https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/security-center/advisory/intel-sa-00464.html) +- **Affected CPUs:** Intel Skylake through Comet Lake (different steppings; see advisory for details) +- **CVSS:** 6.5 (Medium) + +Improper isolation of shared resources in some Intel processors allows an authenticated user to potentially enable information disclosure via local access. Specifically, the Indirect Branch Restricted Speculation (IBRS) mitigation may not be fully applied after certain privilege-level transitions, allowing residual branch predictions to cross security boundaries. + +**Why out of scope:** The mitigation is exclusively a microcode update (released June 2021) with no corresponding Linux kernel sysfs entry in `/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/`, no new CPUID bit, no new MSR, and no kernel configuration option. The only way to detect the fix would be to maintain a per-CPU-stepping minimum microcode version lookup table, which is brittle and high-maintenance. Additionally, Intel dropped microcode support for Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge in the same timeframe, leaving those generations permanently unpatched with no mitigation path available. + +## CVE-2020-24512 — Observable Timing Discrepancy (Trivial Data Value) + +- **Issue:** [#409](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/409) +- **Advisory:** [INTEL-SA-00464](https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/security-center/advisory/intel-sa-00464.html) +- **Affected CPUs:** Intel Skylake through Tiger Lake (broad scope; see advisory for details) +- **CVSS:** 2.8 (Low) + +Observable timing discrepancy in some Intel processors allows an authenticated user to potentially enable information disclosure via local access. Certain cache optimizations treat "trivial data value" cache lines (e.g., all-zero lines) differently from non-trivial lines, creating a timing side channel that can distinguish memory content patterns. + +**Why out of scope:** Like CVE-2020-24511, this is a microcode-only fix with no Linux kernel sysfs entry, no CPUID bit, no MSR, and no kernel configuration option. Detection would require a per-CPU-stepping microcode version lookup table. The vulnerability has low severity (CVSS 2.8) and practical exploitation is limited. Intel dropped microcode support for Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge, leaving those generations permanently vulnerable. + +## CVE-2021-26318 — AMD Prefetch Attacks through Power and Time + +- **Issue:** [#412](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/412) +- **Bulletin:** [AMD-SB-1017](https://www.amd.com/en/resources/product-security/bulletin/amd-sb-1017.html) +- **Research paper:** [AMD Prefetch Attacks through Power and Time (USENIX Security '22)](https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity22/presentation/lipp) +- **CVSS:** 5.5 (Medium) + +The x86 PREFETCH instruction on AMD CPUs leaks timing and power information, enabling a microarchitectural KASLR bypass from unprivileged userspace. The researchers demonstrated kernel address space layout recovery and kernel memory leakage at ~52 B/s using Spectre gadgets. + +**Why out of scope:** AMD acknowledged the research but explicitly stated they are "not recommending any mitigations at this time," as the attack leaks kernel address layout information (KASLR bypass) but does not directly leak kernel data across address space boundaries. KPTI was never enabled on AMD by default in the Linux kernel as a result. No microcode, kernel, or sysfs mitigations have been issued, leaving nothing for this script to check. + +## CVE-2024-7881 — ARM Prefetcher Privilege Escalation + +- **Affected CPUs:** Specific ARM cores only +- **CVSS:** 5.1 (Medium) + +The prefetch engine on certain ARM cores can fetch data from privileged memory locations. Mitigation is disabling the affected prefetcher via the `CPUACTLR6_EL1[41]` register bit. + +**Why out of scope:** ARM-specific with very narrow scope and no Linux sysfs integration. The mitigation is a per-core register tweak, not a kernel or microcode update detectable by this tool. + +## CVE-2024-36348 — AMD Transient Scheduler Attack (UMIP bypass) + +- **Bulletin:** [AMD-SB-7029](https://www.amd.com/en/resources/product-security/bulletin/amd-sb-7029.html) +- **CVSS:** 3.8 (Low) + +A transient execution vulnerability in some AMD processors may allow a user process to speculatively infer CPU configuration registers even when UMIP is enabled. + +**Why out of scope:** AMD has determined that "leakage of CPU Configuration does not result in leakage of sensitive information" and has marked this CVE as "No fix planned" across all affected product lines. No microcode or kernel mitigations have been issued, leaving nothing for this script to check. + +## CVE-2024-36349 — AMD Transient Scheduler Attack (TSC_AUX leak) + +- **Bulletin:** [AMD-SB-7029](https://www.amd.com/en/resources/product-security/bulletin/amd-sb-7029.html) +- **CVSS:** 3.8 (Low) + +A transient execution vulnerability in some AMD processors may allow a user process to infer TSC_AUX even when such a read is disabled. + +**Why out of scope:** AMD has determined that "leakage of TSC_AUX does not result in leakage of sensitive information" and has marked this CVE as "No fix planned" across all affected product lines. No microcode or kernel mitigations have been issued, leaving nothing for this script to check. + +## No CVE — BlindSide (Speculative Probing) + +- **Issue:** [#374](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/374) +- **Research paper:** [Speculative Probing: Hacking Blind in the Spectre Era (VUSec, ACM CCS 2020)](https://www.vusec.net/projects/blindside/) +- **Red Hat advisory:** [Article 5394291](https://access.redhat.com/articles/5394291) +- **Affected CPUs:** All CPUs vulnerable to Spectre V2 (BTB-based speculative execution) + +An attack technique that combines a pre-existing kernel memory corruption bug (e.g., a heap buffer overflow) with speculative execution to perform "Speculative BROP" (Blind Return-Oriented Programming). Instead of crashing the system when probing invalid addresses, BlindSide performs the probing speculatively: faults are suppressed in the speculative domain, and information is leaked via cache timing side channels. This allows an attacker to silently derandomize kernel memory layout and bypass KASLR/FGKASLR without triggering any fault. + +**Why out of scope:** BlindSide is an exploitation technique, not a discrete hardware vulnerability: no CVE was assigned. Red Hat explicitly states it is "not a new flaw, but a new attack." It requires a pre-existing kernel memory corruption bug as a prerequisite, and the speculative execution aspect leverages the same BTB behavior as Spectre V2 (CVE-2017-5715). No dedicated microcode update, kernel config, MSR, CPUID bit, or sysfs entry exists for BlindSide. The closest hardware mitigations (IBPB, IBRS, STIBP, Retpoline) are already covered by this tool's Spectre V2 checks. + +## No CVE — TLBleed (TLB side-channel) + +- **Issue:** [#231](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/231) +- **Research paper:** [Defeating Cache Side-channel Protections with TLB Attacks (VUSec, USENIX Security '18)](https://www.vusec.net/projects/tlbleed/) +- **Red Hat blog:** [Temporal side-channels and you: Understanding TLBleed](https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/temporal-side-channels-and-you-understanding-tlbleed) +- **Affected CPUs:** Intel CPUs with Hyper-Threading (demonstrated on Skylake, Coffee Lake, Broadwell Xeon) + +A timing side-channel attack exploiting the shared Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB) on Intel hyperthreaded CPUs. By using machine learning to analyze TLB hit/miss timing patterns, an attacker co-located on the same physical core can extract cryptographic keys (demonstrated with 99.8% success rate on a 256-bit EdDSA key). OpenBSD disabled Hyper-Threading by default in response. + +**Why out of scope:** No CVE was ever assigned — Intel explicitly declined to request one. Intel stated the attack is "not related to Spectre or Meltdown" and has no plans to issue a microcode fix, pointing to existing constant-time coding practices in cryptographic software as the appropriate defense. No Linux kernel mitigation was ever merged. Red Hat's guidance was limited to operational advice (disable SMT, use CPU pinning) rather than a software fix. The only OS-level response was OpenBSD disabling Hyper-Threading by default. With no CVE, no microcode update, and no kernel mitigation, there is nothing for this script to check. + +--- + +# Not a transient/speculative execution vulnerability + +These are hardware flaws but not side-channel or speculative execution issues. They fall outside the vulnerability class this tool is designed to detect. + +## CVE-2019-11157 — Plundervolt (VoltJockey) + +- **Issue:** [#335](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/335) +- **Advisory:** [INTEL-SA-00289](https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/security-center/advisory/intel-sa-00289.html) +- **Research:** [Plundervolt (plundervolt.com)](https://plundervolt.com/) +- **Affected CPUs:** Intel Core 6th–10th gen (Skylake through Comet Lake) with SGX +- **CVSS:** 7.1 (High) + +A voltage fault injection attack where a privileged attacker (ring 0) uses the software-accessible voltage scaling interface to undervolt the CPU during SGX enclave computations, inducing predictable bit flips that compromise enclave integrity and confidentiality. Intel's microcode fix locks down the voltage/frequency scaling MSRs to prevent software-initiated undervolting. + +**Why out of scope:** Not a transient or speculative execution vulnerability — this is a fault injection attack exploiting voltage manipulation, with no side-channel or speculative execution component. It requires ring 0 access and targets SGX enclaves specifically. While Intel issued a microcode update that locks voltage controls, there is no Linux kernel sysfs entry, no CPUID flag, and no kernel-side mitigation to detect. The fix is purely a microcode-level lockdown of voltage scaling registers, which is not exposed in any standard interface this tool can query. + +## CVE-2020-8694 / CVE-2020-8695 — Platypus (RAPL Power Side Channel) + +- **Issue:** [#384](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/384) +- **Advisory:** [INTEL-SA-00389](https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/security-center/advisory/intel-sa-00389.html) +- **Research:** [PLATYPUS (platypusattack.com)](https://platypusattack.com/) +- **Affected CPUs:** Intel Core (Sandy Bridge+), Intel Xeon (Sandy Bridge-EP+) +- **CVSS:** 5.6 (Medium) / 6.5 (Medium) + +A software-based power side-channel attack exploiting Intel's Running Average Power Limit (RAPL) interface. By monitoring energy consumption reported through the `powercap` sysfs interface or the `MSR_RAPL_POWER_UNIT` / `MSR_PKG_ENERGY_STATUS` MSRs, an unprivileged attacker can statistically distinguish instructions and operands, recover AES-NI keys from SGX enclaves, and break kernel ASLR. + +**Why out of scope:** Not a transient or speculative execution vulnerability — this is a power analysis side-channel attack with no speculative execution component. The mitigations (microcode update restricting RAPL energy reporting to privileged access, and kernel restricting the `powercap` sysfs interface) are not exposed via `/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/`. There is no dedicated sysfs vulnerability entry, no CPUID flag, and no kernel configuration option for this tool to check. + +## CVE-2023-31315 — SinkClose (AMD SMM Lock Bypass) + +- **Issue:** [#499](https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/issues/499) +- **Bulletin:** [AMD-SB-7014](https://www.amd.com/en/resources/product-security/bulletin/amd-sb-7014.html) +- **Research:** [AMD SinkClose (IOActive, DEF CON 32)](https://www.ioactive.com/resources/amd-sinkclose-universal-ring-2-privilege-escalation) +- **Affected CPUs:** AMD Zen 1–5 (EPYC, Ryzen, Threadripper, Embedded) +- **CVSS:** 7.5 (High) + +Improper validation in a model-specific register (MSR) allows a program with ring 0 (kernel) access to modify System Management Mode (SMM) configuration while SMI lock is enabled, escalating privileges from ring 0 to ring -2 (SMM). AMD provides two mitigation paths: BIOS/AGESA firmware updates (all product lines) and hot-loadable microcode updates (EPYC server processors only). + +**Why out of scope:** Not a transient or speculative execution vulnerability — this is a privilege escalation via MSR manipulation, with no side-channel component. It requires ring 0 access as a prerequisite, fundamentally different from Spectre/Meltdown-class attacks where unprivileged code can leak data across privilege boundaries. There is no Linux kernel sysfs entry and no kernel-side mitigation. Although AMD provides hot-loadable microcode for some EPYC processors, the client and embedded product lines are mitigated only through BIOS firmware updates, which this tool cannot detect. + +## CVE-2024-56161 — EntrySign (AMD Microcode Signature Bypass) + +- **Affected CPUs:** AMD Zen 1-5 +- **CVSS:** 7.2 (High) + +A weakness in AMD's microcode signature verification (AES-CMAC hash) allows loading arbitrary unsigned microcode with administrator privileges. + +**Why out of scope:** This is a microcode integrity/authentication issue, not a speculative execution vulnerability. It does not involve transient execution side channels and is outside the scope of this tool. + +## CVE-2025-29943 — StackWarp (AMD SEV-SNP) + +- **Affected CPUs:** AMD Zen 1-5 +- **CVSS:** Low + +Exploits a synchronization failure in the AMD stack engine via an undocumented MSR bit, targeting AMD SEV-SNP confidential VMs. Requires hypervisor-level (ring 0) access. + +**Why out of scope:** Not a transient/speculative execution side channel. This is an architectural attack on AMD SEV-SNP confidential computing that requires hypervisor access, which is outside the threat model of this tool. diff --git a/doc/batch_json.md b/doc/batch_json.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..59204f3 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/batch_json.md @@ -0,0 +1,373 @@ +# JSON Output Format + +`--batch json` emits a single, self-contained JSON object that describes the +scan environment and the result of every CVE check. You can feed it to your +monitoring system, to a SIEM, to a time-series database, you name it. + +```sh +sudo ./spectre-meltdown-checker.sh --batch json | jq . +``` + +## Top-level schema + +``` +{ + "meta": { ... }, // Run metadata and flags + "system": { ... }, // Kernel and host context + "cpu": { ... }, // CPU hardware identification + "cpu_microcode": { ... }, // Microcode version and status + "vulnerabilities": [ ... ] // One object per checked CVE +} +``` + +`format_version` in `meta` is an integer that will be incremented on +backward-incompatible schema changes. The current value is **1**. + +## Section reference + +### `meta` + +Run metadata. Always present. + +| Field | Type | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---|---| +| `script_version` | string | e.g. `"25.30.0250400123"` | Script version | +| `format_version` | integer | `1` | JSON schema version; incremented on breaking changes | +| `timestamp` | string | ISO 8601 UTC, e.g. `"2025-04-07T12:00:00Z"` | When the scan started | +| `os` | string | e.g. `"Linux"`, `"FreeBSD"` | Output of `uname -s` | +| `mode` | string | `"live"` / `"no-runtime"` / `"no-hw"` / `"hw-only"` | Operating mode (see [modes](README.md#operating-modes)) | +| `run_as_root` | boolean | | Whether the script ran as root. Non-root scans skip MSR reads and may miss mitigations | +| `reduced_accuracy` | boolean | | Kernel image, config, or System.map was missing; some checks fall back to weaker heuristics | +| `paranoid` | boolean | | `--paranoid` mode: stricter criteria (e.g. requires SMT disabled, IBPB always-on) | +| `sysfs_only` | boolean | | `--sysfs-only`: only the kernel's own sysfs report was used, not independent detection | +| `no_hw` | boolean | | `--no-hw`: hardware checks (MSR, CPUID) were skipped | +| `extra` | boolean | | `--extra`: additional experimental checks were enabled | +| `mocked` | boolean | | One or more CPU values were overridden for testing. Results do **not** reflect the real system | + +**Example:** +```json +"meta": { + "script_version": "25.30.025040123", + "format_version": 1, + "timestamp": "2026-04-06T12:22:14Z", + "os": "Linux", + "mode": "live", + "run_as_root": true, + "reduced_accuracy": false, + "paranoid": false, + "sysfs_only": false, + "no_hw": false, + "extra": false, + "mocked": false +} +``` + +**Important flags for fleet operators:** + +- `run_as_root: false` means the scan was incomplete. Treat results as lower + confidence. Alert separately: results may be missing or wrong. +- `sysfs_only: true` means the script trusted the kernel's self-report without + independent verification. Some older kernels misreport their mitigation + status. Do not use `--sysfs-only` for production fleet monitoring. +- `paranoid: true` raises the bar: only compare `vulnerable` counts across + hosts with the same `paranoid` value. +- `mocked: true` must never appear on a production host. If it does, every + downstream result is fabricated. + +--- + +### `system` + +Kernel and host environment. Always present. + +| Field | Type | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---|---| +| `kernel_release` | string \| null | e.g. `"6.1.0-21-amd64"` | Output of `uname -r` (null in no-runtime, no-hw, and hw-only modes) | +| `kernel_version` | string \| null | e.g. `"#1 SMP Debian …"` | Output of `uname -v` (null in no-runtime, no-hw, and hw-only modes) | +| `kernel_arch` | string \| null | e.g. `"x86_64"` | Output of `uname -m` (null in no-runtime, no-hw, and hw-only modes) | +| `kernel_image` | string \| null | e.g. `"/boot/vmlinuz-6.1.0-21-amd64"` | Path passed via `--kernel`, or null if not specified | +| `kernel_config` | string \| null | | Path passed via `--config`, or null | +| `kernel_version_string` | string \| null | | Kernel version banner extracted from the image | +| `kernel_cmdline` | string \| null | | Kernel command line from `/proc/cmdline` (live mode) or the image | +| `cpu_count` | integer \| null | | Number of logical CPUs detected | +| `smt_enabled` | boolean \| null | | Whether SMT (HyperThreading) is currently active; null if undeterminable | +| `hypervisor_host` | boolean \| null | | Whether this machine is detected as a VM host (running KVM, Xen, VMware, etc.) | +| `hypervisor_host_reason` | string \| null | | Human-readable explanation of why `hypervisor_host` was set | + +**`hypervisor_host`** materially changes the risk profile of several CVEs. +L1TF (CVE-2018-3646) and MDS (CVE-2018-12126/12130/12127) are significantly +more severe on hypervisor hosts because they can be exploited across VM +boundaries by a malicious guest. Prioritise remediation where +`hypervisor_host: true`. + +--- + +### `cpu` + +CPU hardware identification. `null` when `--no-hw` is active. + +| Field | Type | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---|---| +| `vendor` | string \| null | e.g. `"Intel"`, `"AuthenticAMD"` | CPU vendor string | +| `friendly_name` | string \| null | e.g. `"Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-9700K CPU @ 3.60GHz"` | Human-readable CPU model | +| `family` | integer \| null | | CPU family number | +| `model` | integer \| null | | CPU model number | +| `stepping` | integer \| null | | CPU stepping number | +| `cpuid` | string \| null | hex, e.g. `"0x000906ed"` | Full CPUID leaf 1 EAX value | +| `platform_id` | integer \| null | | Intel platform ID (from MSR 0x17); null on AMD and ARM | +| `hybrid` | boolean \| null | | Whether this is a hybrid CPU (P-cores + E-cores, e.g. Alder Lake) | +| `codename` | string \| null | e.g. `"Coffee Lake"` | Intel CPU codename; null on AMD and ARM | +| `arm_part_list` | string \| null | | Space-separated list of ARM part numbers detected across cores | +| `arm_arch_list` | string \| null | | Space-separated list of ARM architecture levels detected across cores | +| `capabilities` | object | | CPU feature flags detected via CPUID and MSR reads (see below) | + +#### `cpu.capabilities` + +Each capability is a **tri-state**: `true` (present), `false` (absent), or +`null` (not applicable or could not be read, e.g. when not root or on AMD for +Intel-specific features). + +| Capability | Meaning | +|---|---| +| `spec_ctrl` | SPEC_CTRL MSR (Intel: ibrs + ibpb via WRMSR; required for many mitigations) | +| `ibrs` | Indirect Branch Restricted Speculation | +| `ibpb` | Indirect Branch Prediction Barrier | +| `ibpb_ret` | IBPB on return (enhanced form) | +| `stibp` | Single Thread Indirect Branch Predictors | +| `ssbd` | Speculative Store Bypass Disable | +| `l1d_flush` | L1D cache flush instruction | +| `md_clear` | VERW clears CPU buffers (MDS mitigation) | +| `arch_capabilities` | IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES MSR is present | +| `rdcl_no` | Not susceptible to RDCL (Meltdown-like attacks) | +| `ibrs_all` | Enhanced IBRS always-on mode supported | +| `rsba` | RSB may use return predictions from outside the RSB | +| `l1dflush_no` | Not susceptible to L1D flush side-channel | +| `ssb_no` | Not susceptible to Speculative Store Bypass | +| `mds_no` | Not susceptible to MDS | +| `taa_no` | Not susceptible to TSX Asynchronous Abort | +| `pschange_msc_no` | Page-size-change MSC not susceptible | +| `tsx_ctrl_msr` | TSX_CTRL MSR is present | +| `tsx_ctrl_rtm_disable` | RTM disabled via TSX_CTRL | +| `tsx_ctrl_cpuid_clear` | CPUID HLE/RTM bits cleared via TSX_CTRL | +| `gds_ctrl` | GDS_CTRL MSR present (GDS mitigation control) | +| `gds_no` | Not susceptible to Gather Data Sampling | +| `gds_mitg_dis` | GDS mitigation disabled | +| `gds_mitg_lock` | GDS mitigation locked | +| `rfds_no` | Not susceptible to Register File Data Sampling | +| `rfds_clear` | VERW clears register file stale data | +| `its_no` | Not susceptible to Indirect Target Selection | +| `sbdr_ssdp_no` | Not susceptible to SBDR/SSDP | +| `fbsdp_no` | Not susceptible to FBSDP | +| `psdp_no` | Not susceptible to PSDP | +| `fb_clear` | Fill buffer cleared on idle/C6 | +| `rtm` | Restricted Transactional Memory (TSX RTM) present | +| `tsx_force_abort` | TSX_FORCE_ABORT MSR present | +| `tsx_force_abort_rtm_disable` | RTM disabled via TSX_FORCE_ABORT | +| `tsx_force_abort_cpuid_clear` | CPUID RTM cleared via TSX_FORCE_ABORT | +| `sgx` | Software Guard Extensions present | +| `srbds` | SRBDS affected | +| `srbds_on` | SRBDS mitigation active | +| `amd_ssb_no` | AMD: not susceptible to Speculative Store Bypass | +| `hygon_ssb_no` | Hygon: not susceptible to Speculative Store Bypass | +| `ipred` | Indirect Predictor Barrier support | +| `rrsba` | Restricted RSB Alternate (Intel Retbleed mitigation) | +| `bhi` | Branch History Injection mitigation support | +| `tsa_sq_no` | Not susceptible to TSA-SQ | +| `tsa_l1_no` | Not susceptible to TSA-L1 | +| `verw_clear` | VERW clears CPU buffers | +| `autoibrs` | AMD AutoIBRS (equivalent to enhanced IBRS on Intel) | +| `sbpb` | Selective Branch Predictor Barrier (AMD Inception mitigation) | +| `avx2` | AVX2 supported (relevant to Downfall / GDS) | +| `avx512` | AVX-512 supported (relevant to Downfall / GDS) | + +--- + +### `cpu_microcode` + +Microcode version and status. `null` under the same conditions as `cpu`. + +| Field | Type | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---|---| +| `installed_version` | string \| null | hex, e.g. `"0xf4"` | Currently running microcode revision | +| `latest_version` | string \| null | hex | Latest known-good version in the firmware database; null if CPU is not in the database | +| `microcode_up_to_date` | boolean \| null | | Whether `installed_version == latest_version`; null if either is unavailable | +| `is_blacklisted` | boolean | | Whether the installed microcode is known to cause instability and must be rolled back | +| `message` | string \| null | | Human-readable note from the firmware database (e.g. changelog excerpt) | +| `db_source` | string \| null | | Which database was used (e.g. `"Intel-SA"`, `"MCExtractor"`) | +| `db_info` | string \| null | | Database revision or date | + +**`is_blacklisted: true`** means the installed microcode is known to cause +system instability or incorrect behaviour. Treat this as a P1 incident: roll +back to the previous microcode immediately. + +**`microcode_up_to_date: false`** means a newer microcode is available. This +does not necessarily mean the system is vulnerable (the current microcode may +still include all required mitigations), but warrants investigation. + +--- + +### `vulnerabilities` + +Array of CVE check results. One object per checked CVE, in check order. +Empty array (`[]`) if no CVEs were checked (unusual; would require `--cve` +with an unknown CVE ID). + +| Field | Type | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---|---| +| `cve` | string | e.g. `"CVE-2017-5753"` | CVE identifier | +| `name` | string | e.g. `"SPECTRE VARIANT 1"` | Short key name used in batch formats | +| `aliases` | string \| null | e.g. `"Spectre Variant 1, bounds check bypass"` | Full name including all known aliases | +| `cpu_affected` | boolean | | Whether this CPU's hardware design is affected by this CVE | +| `status` | string | `"OK"` / `"VULN"` / `"UNK"` | Check outcome (see below) | +| `vulnerable` | boolean \| null | `false` / `true` / `null` | `false`=OK, `true`=VULN, `null`=UNK | +| `info` | string | | Human-readable description of the specific mitigation state or reason | +| `sysfs_status` | string \| null | `"OK"` / `"VULN"` / `"UNK"` / null | Status as reported by the kernel via `/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/`; null if sysfs was not consulted for this CVE | +| `sysfs_message` | string \| null | | Raw text from the sysfs file (e.g. `"Mitigation: PTI"`); null if sysfs was not consulted | + +#### Status values + +| `status` | `vulnerable` | Meaning | +|---|---|---| +| `"OK"` | `false` | CPU is unaffected by design, or all required mitigations are in place | +| `"VULN"` | `true` | CPU is affected and mitigations are missing or insufficient | +| `"UNK"` | `null` | The script could not determine the status (missing kernel info, insufficient privileges, or no detection logic for this platform) | + +#### `cpu_affected` explained + +`cpu_affected: false` with `status: "OK"` means the CPU hardware is +architecturally immune — no patch was ever needed. + +`cpu_affected: true` with `status: "OK"` means the hardware has the weakness +but all required mitigations (kernel, microcode, or both) are in place. + +This distinction matters for fleet auditing: filter on `cpu_affected: true` to +see only systems where mitigation effort was actually required and confirmed. + +#### `sysfs_status` vs `status` + +`sysfs_status` is the raw kernel self-report. `status` is the script's +independent assessment, which may differ: + +- The script may **upgrade** a sysfs `"VULN"` to `"OK"` when it detects a + silent backport that the kernel doesn't know about. +- The script may **downgrade** a sysfs `"OK"` to `"VULN"` when it detects an + incomplete mitigation the kernel doesn't flag (e.g. L1TF on a hypervisor + host with SMT still enabled, or TSA in `user` mode on a VMM host). +- `sysfs_status` is `null` when the kernel has no sysfs entry for this CVE + (older kernels, or CVEs not yet tracked by the kernel). + +Always use `status` / `vulnerable` for alerting. Use `sysfs_status` for +diagnostics and audit trails. + +**Example:** +```json +{ + "cve": "CVE-2017-5715", + "name": "SPECTRE VARIANT 2", + "aliases": "Spectre Variant 2, branch target injection", + "cpu_affected": true, + "status": "OK", + "vulnerable": false, + "info": "Full generic retpoline is mitigating the vulnerability", + "sysfs_status": "OK", + "sysfs_message": "Mitigation: Retpolines; IBPB: conditional; IBRS_FW; STIBP: conditional; RSB filling; PBRSB-eIBRS: Not affected; BHI: Not affected" +} +``` + +--- + +## Exit codes + +The script exits with: + +| Code | Meaning | +|---|---| +| `0` | All checked CVEs are `OK` | +| `2` | At least one CVE is `VULN` | +| `3` | No CVEs are `VULN`, but at least one is `UNK` | + +These exit codes are the same in all batch modes and in interactive mode. +Use them in combination with the JSON body for reliable alerting. + +--- + +## Caveats and edge cases + +**No-runtime mode (`--no-runtime`)** +`system.kernel_release`, `kernel_version`, and `kernel_arch` are null (those +come from `uname`, which reports the running kernel, not the inspected one). +`meta.mode: "no-runtime"` signals this. `system.kernel_image` and +`system.kernel_version_string` carry the inspected image path and banner +instead. + +**No-hardware mode (`--no-hw`)** +`cpu` and `cpu_microcode` are null. CVE checks that rely on hardware +capability detection (`cap_*` flags, MSR reads) will report `status: "UNK"`. +`cpu_affected` will be `false` for all CVEs (cannot determine affection without +hardware info). `meta.mode: "no-hw"` signals this. + +**Hardware-only mode (`--hw-only`)** +Only CPU information and per-CVE affectedness are reported. No kernel +inspection is performed, so vulnerability mitigations are not checked. +`meta.mode: "hw-only"` signals this. + +**`--sysfs-only`** +The script trusts the kernel's sysfs report without running independent +detection. `meta.sysfs_only: true` flags this. Some older kernels misreport +their status. Do not use for production fleet monitoring. + +**`--paranoid`** +Enables defense-in-depth checks beyond the security community consensus. +A `status: "OK"` under `paranoid: true` means a higher bar was met. Do not +compare results across hosts with different `paranoid` values. + +**`reduced_accuracy`** +Set when the kernel image, config file, or System.map could not be read. +Some checks fall back to weaker heuristics and may report `"UNK"` for CVEs +that are actually mitigated. + +**Non-x86 architectures (ARM, ARM64)** +`cpu.codename` and `cpu.platform_id` are always null. `cpu.arm_part_list` +and `cpu.arm_arch_list` carry the relevant identifiers instead. +Most `cpu.capabilities` fields are null (those flags are Intel/AMD-specific). + +**`mocked: true`** +Must never appear on a production host. If it does, the results are +fabricated and every downstream alert is unreliable. + +--- + +## Schema stability + +`meta.format_version` is incremented on backward-incompatible changes (field +removal or type change). Additive changes (new fields) do not increment the +version; consumers must tolerate unknown fields. + +Recommended practice: check `format_version == 1` at parse time and reject +or alert on any other value until you have tested compatibility with the new +version. + +--- + +## Migration from `json-terse` + +The legacy `--batch json-terse` format emits a flat array of objects: + +```json +[ + {"NAME": "SPECTRE VARIANT 1", "CVE": "CVE-2017-5753", "VULNERABLE": false, "INFOS": "..."}, + ... +] +``` + +It carries no system, CPU, or microcode context. It has no sysfs data. It +uses uppercase field names. + +To migrate: + +1. Replace `--batch json-terse` with `--batch json`. +2. The equivalent of the old `VULNERABLE` field is `vulnerabilities[].vulnerable`. +3. The equivalent of the old `INFOS` field is `vulnerabilities[].info`. +4. The equivalent of the old `NAME` field is `vulnerabilities[].name`. +5. The old format is still available as `--batch json-terse` for transition + periods. diff --git a/doc/batch_json.schema.json b/doc/batch_json.schema.json new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4f4d888 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/batch_json.schema.json @@ -0,0 +1,346 @@ +{ + "$schema": "https://json-schema.org/draft/2020-12/schema", + "$id": "https://github.com/speed47/spectre-meltdown-checker/dist/batch_json.schema.json", + "title": "spectre-meltdown-checker --batch json output", + "description": "Schema for the comprehensive JSON output produced by spectre-meltdown-checker.sh --batch json. format_version 1.", + "type": "object", + "required": ["meta", "system", "cpu", "cpu_microcode", "vulnerabilities"], + "additionalProperties": false, + "properties": { + + "meta": { + "description": "Run metadata and option flags.", + "type": "object", + "required": [ + "script_version", "format_version", "timestamp", "os", "mode", + "run_as_root", "reduced_accuracy", "paranoid", "sysfs_only", + "no_hw", "extra", "mocked" + ], + "additionalProperties": false, + "properties": { + "script_version": { + "description": "Script version string, e.g. '25.30.0250400123'.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "format_version": { + "description": "JSON schema version. Incremented on backward-incompatible changes. Current value: 1.", + "type": "integer", + "const": 1 + }, + "timestamp": { + "description": "ISO 8601 UTC timestamp of when the scan started, e.g. '2025-04-07T12:00:00Z'.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "os": { + "description": "Operating system name from uname -s, e.g. 'Linux', 'FreeBSD'.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "mode": { + "description": "Operating mode: 'live' (default), 'no-runtime' (--no-runtime), 'no-hw' (--no-hw), or 'hw-only' (--hw-only).", + "type": "string", + "enum": ["live", "no-runtime", "no-hw", "hw-only"] + }, + "run_as_root": { + "description": "Whether the script ran as root. Non-root scans skip MSR reads and may produce incomplete or inaccurate results.", + "type": "boolean" + }, + "reduced_accuracy": { + "description": "True when the kernel image, config, or System.map was missing. Some checks fall back to weaker heuristics.", + "type": ["boolean", "null"] + }, + "paranoid": { + "description": "True when --paranoid was set: stricter criteria (e.g. requires SMT disabled, IBPB always-on).", + "type": "boolean" + }, + "sysfs_only": { + "description": "True when --sysfs-only was set: the script trusted the kernel's own sysfs report without independent detection.", + "type": "boolean" + }, + "no_hw": { + "description": "True when --no-hw was set: hardware checks (MSR, CPUID) were skipped.", + "type": "boolean" + }, + "extra": { + "description": "True when --extra was set: additional experimental checks were enabled.", + "type": "boolean" + }, + "mocked": { + "description": "True when one or more CPU values were overridden for testing. Results do NOT reflect the real system.", + "type": ["boolean", "null"] + } + } + }, + + "system": { + "description": "Kernel and host environment context.", + "type": ["object", "null"], + "required": [ + "kernel_release", "kernel_version", "kernel_arch", + "kernel_image", "kernel_config", "kernel_version_string", + "kernel_cmdline", "cpu_count", "smt_enabled", + "hypervisor_host", "hypervisor_host_reason" + ], + "additionalProperties": false, + "properties": { + "kernel_release": { + "description": "Output of uname -r (live mode only), e.g. '6.1.0-21-amd64'. Null in other modes.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "kernel_version": { + "description": "Output of uname -v (live mode only), e.g. '#1 SMP Debian …'. Null in other modes.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "kernel_arch": { + "description": "Output of uname -m (live mode only), e.g. 'x86_64'. Null in other modes.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "kernel_image": { + "description": "Path to the kernel image passed via --kernel. Null in live mode.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "kernel_config": { + "description": "Path to the kernel config passed via --config. Null if not provided.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "kernel_version_string": { + "description": "Kernel version banner extracted from the image. Null if unavailable.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "kernel_cmdline": { + "description": "Kernel command line from /proc/cmdline (live mode) or the image. Null if unavailable.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "cpu_count": { + "description": "Number of logical CPUs detected (max core ID + 1). Null if undeterminable.", + "type": ["integer", "null"], + "minimum": 1 + }, + "smt_enabled": { + "description": "Whether SMT (HyperThreading) is currently enabled. Null if the script could not determine the state.", + "type": ["boolean", "null"] + }, + "hypervisor_host": { + "description": "Whether this machine is detected as a VM host (running KVM, Xen, VMware, etc.). Null if undeterminable.", + "type": ["boolean", "null"] + }, + "hypervisor_host_reason": { + "description": "Human-readable explanation of why hypervisor_host was set. Null if hypervisor_host is false or null.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + } + } + }, + + "cpu": { + "description": "CPU hardware identification and capability flags. Null when --no-hw is active.", + "type": ["object", "null"], + "required": [ + "vendor", "friendly_name", "family", "model", "stepping", + "cpuid", "platform_id", "hybrid", "codename", + "arm_part_list", "arm_arch_list", "capabilities" + ], + "additionalProperties": false, + "properties": { + "vendor": { + "description": "CPU vendor string, e.g. 'Intel', 'AuthenticAMD'.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "friendly_name": { + "description": "Human-readable CPU model from /proc/cpuinfo, e.g. 'Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-9700K CPU @ 3.60GHz'.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "family": { + "description": "CPU family number.", + "type": ["integer", "null"] + }, + "model": { + "description": "CPU model number.", + "type": ["integer", "null"] + }, + "stepping": { + "description": "CPU stepping number.", + "type": ["integer", "null"] + }, + "cpuid": { + "description": "Full CPUID leaf 1 EAX value as a hex string, e.g. '0x000906ed'. Null on some ARM CPUs.", + "type": ["string", "null"], + "pattern": "^0x[0-9a-f]+$" + }, + "platform_id": { + "description": "Intel platform ID from MSR 0x17. Null on AMD and ARM.", + "type": ["integer", "null"] + }, + "hybrid": { + "description": "Whether this is a hybrid CPU (P-cores + E-cores, e.g. Alder Lake). Null if undeterminable.", + "type": ["boolean", "null"] + }, + "codename": { + "description": "Intel CPU codename, e.g. 'Coffee Lake'. Null on AMD and ARM.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "arm_part_list": { + "description": "Space-separated list of ARM part numbers detected across cores. Null on x86.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "arm_arch_list": { + "description": "Space-separated list of ARM architecture levels detected across cores. Null on x86.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "capabilities": { + "description": "CPU feature flags detected via CPUID and MSR reads. Each value is true (present), false (absent), or null (not applicable or could not be read).", + "type": "object", + "additionalProperties": false, + "properties": { + "spec_ctrl": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "SPEC_CTRL MSR present (Intel; enables IBRS + IBPB via WRMSR)" }, + "ibrs": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Indirect Branch Restricted Speculation" }, + "ibpb": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Indirect Branch Prediction Barrier" }, + "ibpb_ret": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "IBPB on return (enhanced form)" }, + "stibp": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Single Thread Indirect Branch Predictors" }, + "ssbd": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Speculative Store Bypass Disable" }, + "l1d_flush": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "L1D cache flush instruction" }, + "md_clear": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "VERW clears CPU buffers (MDS mitigation)" }, + "arch_capabilities": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "IA32_ARCH_CAPABILITIES MSR is present" }, + "rdcl_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to RDCL (Meltdown-like attacks)" }, + "ibrs_all": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Enhanced IBRS always-on mode supported" }, + "rsba": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "RSB may use return predictions from outside the RSB" }, + "l1dflush_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to L1D flush side-channel" }, + "ssb_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to Speculative Store Bypass" }, + "mds_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to MDS" }, + "taa_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to TSX Asynchronous Abort" }, + "pschange_msc_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Page-size-change MSC not susceptible" }, + "tsx_ctrl_msr": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "TSX_CTRL MSR is present" }, + "tsx_ctrl_rtm_disable": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "RTM disabled via TSX_CTRL" }, + "tsx_ctrl_cpuid_clear": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "CPUID HLE/RTM bits cleared via TSX_CTRL" }, + "gds_ctrl": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "GDS_CTRL MSR present" }, + "gds_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to Gather Data Sampling" }, + "gds_mitg_dis": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "GDS mitigation disabled" }, + "gds_mitg_lock": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "GDS mitigation locked" }, + "rfds_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to Register File Data Sampling" }, + "rfds_clear": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "VERW clears register file stale data" }, + "its_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to Indirect Target Selection" }, + "sbdr_ssdp_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to SBDR/SSDP" }, + "fbsdp_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to FBSDP" }, + "psdp_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to PSDP" }, + "fb_clear": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Fill buffer cleared on idle/C6" }, + "rtm": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Restricted Transactional Memory (TSX RTM) present" }, + "tsx_force_abort": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "TSX_FORCE_ABORT MSR present" }, + "tsx_force_abort_rtm_disable": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "RTM disabled via TSX_FORCE_ABORT" }, + "tsx_force_abort_cpuid_clear": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "CPUID RTM cleared via TSX_FORCE_ABORT" }, + "sgx": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Software Guard Extensions present" }, + "srbds": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "SRBDS affected" }, + "srbds_on": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "SRBDS mitigation active" }, + "amd_ssb_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "AMD: not susceptible to Speculative Store Bypass" }, + "hygon_ssb_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Hygon: not susceptible to Speculative Store Bypass" }, + "ipred": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Indirect Predictor Barrier support" }, + "rrsba": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Restricted RSB Alternate (Intel Retbleed mitigation)" }, + "bhi": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Branch History Injection mitigation support" }, + "tsa_sq_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to TSA-SQ" }, + "tsa_l1_no": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Not susceptible to TSA-L1" }, + "verw_clear": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "VERW clears CPU buffers" }, + "autoibrs": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "AMD AutoIBRS (equivalent to enhanced IBRS on Intel)" }, + "sbpb": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "Selective Branch Predictor Barrier (AMD Inception mitigation)" }, + "avx2": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "AVX2 supported (relevant to Downfall / GDS)" }, + "avx512": { "type": ["boolean", "null"], "description": "AVX-512 supported (relevant to Downfall / GDS)" } + } + } + } + }, + + "cpu_microcode": { + "description": "Microcode version and firmware database status. Null under the same conditions as cpu.", + "type": ["object", "null"], + "required": [ + "installed_version", "latest_version", "microcode_up_to_date", + "is_blacklisted", "message", "db_source", "db_info" + ], + "additionalProperties": false, + "properties": { + "installed_version": { + "description": "Currently running microcode revision as a hex string, e.g. '0xf4'. Null if unreadable.", + "type": ["string", "null"], + "pattern": "^0x[0-9a-f]+$" + }, + "latest_version": { + "description": "Latest known-good microcode version from the firmware database, as a hex string. Null if the CPU is not in the database.", + "type": ["string", "null"], + "pattern": "^0x[0-9a-f]+$" + }, + "microcode_up_to_date": { + "description": "True when installed_version equals latest_version. Null if either is unavailable.", + "type": ["boolean", "null"] + }, + "is_blacklisted": { + "description": "True when the installed microcode is known to cause instability and must be rolled back immediately.", + "type": "boolean" + }, + "message": { + "description": "Human-readable note from the firmware database (e.g. changelog excerpt). Null if absent.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "db_source": { + "description": "Which firmware database was used, e.g. 'Intel-SA', 'MCExtractor'. Null if unavailable.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "db_info": { + "description": "Firmware database revision or date string. Null if unavailable.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + } + } + }, + + "vulnerabilities": { + "description": "Array of CVE check results, one per checked CVE, in check order.", + "type": "array", + "items": { + "type": "object", + "required": [ + "cve", "name", "aliases", "cpu_affected", + "status", "vulnerable", "info", + "sysfs_status", "sysfs_message" + ], + "additionalProperties": false, + "properties": { + "cve": { + "description": "CVE identifier, e.g. 'CVE-2017-5753'. May be 'CVE-0000-0001' for non-CVE checks such as SLS.", + "type": "string", + "pattern": "^CVE-[0-9]{4}-[0-9]+$" + }, + "name": { + "description": "Short key name used across batch formats, e.g. 'SPECTRE VARIANT 1'.", + "type": "string" + }, + "aliases": { + "description": "Full name including all known aliases, e.g. 'Spectre Variant 1, bounds check bypass'. Null if not in the registry.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + }, + "cpu_affected": { + "description": "Whether this CPU's hardware design is affected by this CVE. False when hardware is architecturally immune.", + "type": "boolean" + }, + "status": { + "description": "Check outcome: 'OK'=not vulnerable or unaffected, 'VULN'=vulnerable, 'UNK'=could not determine.", + "type": "string", + "enum": ["OK", "VULN", "UNK"] + }, + "vulnerable": { + "description": "Boolean encoding of status: false=OK, true=VULN, null=UNK.", + "type": ["boolean", "null"] + }, + "info": { + "description": "Human-readable description of the specific mitigation state or reason for the verdict.", + "type": "string" + }, + "sysfs_status": { + "description": "Status as reported by the kernel via /sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/. Null if sysfs was not consulted for this CVE (older kernels, or CVE not tracked by the kernel).", + "type": ["string", "null"], + "enum": ["OK", "VULN", "UNK", null] + }, + "sysfs_message": { + "description": "Raw text from the sysfs vulnerability file, e.g. 'Mitigation: PTI'. Null if sysfs was not consulted.", + "type": ["string", "null"] + } + } + } + } + + } +} diff --git a/doc/batch_nrpe.md b/doc/batch_nrpe.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..049de3f --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/batch_nrpe.md @@ -0,0 +1,149 @@ +# NRPE Output Format + +`--batch nrpe` produces output that conforms to the +[Nagios Plugin Development Guidelines](https://nagios-plugins.org/doc/guidelines.html), +making it directly consumable by Nagios, Icinga, Zabbix (via NRPE), and +compatible monitoring stacks. + +```sh +sudo ./spectre-meltdown-checker.sh --batch nrpe +``` + +## Output structure + +The plugin emits one mandatory status line followed by optional long output: + +``` +STATUS: summary | checked=N vulnerable=N unknown=N +NOTE: ... ← context notes (when applicable) +[CRITICAL] CVE-XXXX-YYYY (NAME): description +[UNKNOWN] CVE-XXXX-YYYY (NAME): description +``` + +### Line 1 — status line + +Always present. Parsed by every Nagios-compatible monitoring system. + +``` +STATUS: summary | perfdata +``` + +| Field | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---| +| `STATUS` | `OK` / `CRITICAL` / `UNKNOWN` | Overall check outcome (see below) | +| `summary` | human-readable string | Count and CVE IDs of affected checks | +| `perfdata` | `checked=N vulnerable=N unknown=N` | Machine-readable counters for graphing | + +#### Status values + +| Status | Exit code | Condition | +|---|---|---| +| `OK` | `0` | All CVE checks passed | +| `CRITICAL` | `2` | At least one CVE is vulnerable | +| `UNKNOWN` | `3` | No VULN found, but at least one check is inconclusive — **or** the script was not run as root and found apparent vulnerabilities (see below) | + +#### Summary format + +| Condition | Summary | +|---|---| +| All OK | `All N CVE checks passed` | +| VULN only | `N/T CVE(s) vulnerable: CVE-A CVE-B ...` | +| VULN + UNK | `N/T CVE(s) vulnerable: CVE-A CVE-B ..., M inconclusive` | +| UNK only | `N/T CVE checks inconclusive` | +| Non-root + VULN | `N/T CVE(s) appear vulnerable (unconfirmed, not root): CVE-A ...` | + +### Lines 2+ — long output + +Shown in the detail/extended info view of most monitoring frontends. +Never parsed by the monitoring core; safe to add or reorder. + +#### Context notes + +Printed before per-CVE details when applicable: + +| Note | Condition | +|---|---| +| `NOTE: paranoid mode active — stricter mitigation requirements applied` | `--paranoid` was used | +| `NOTE: hypervisor host detected (reason); L1TF/MDS severity is elevated` | System is a VM host (KVM, Xen, VMware…) | +| `NOTE: not a hypervisor host` | System is confirmed not a VM host | +| `NOTE: not running as root; MSR reads skipped, results may be incomplete` | Script ran without root privileges | + +#### Per-CVE detail lines + +One line per non-OK CVE. VULN entries (`[CRITICAL]`) appear before UNK +entries (`[UNKNOWN]`); within each group the order follows the CVE registry. + +``` +[CRITICAL] CVE-XXXX-YYYY (SHORT NAME): mitigation status description +[UNKNOWN] CVE-XXXX-YYYY (SHORT NAME): reason check was inconclusive +``` + +## Exit codes + +| Code | Nagios meaning | Condition | +|---|---|---| +| `0` | OK | All checked CVEs are mitigated or hardware-unaffected | +| `2` | CRITICAL | At least one CVE is vulnerable (script ran as root) | +| `3` | UNKNOWN | At least one check inconclusive — or apparent VULN found without root | +| `255` | — | Script error (bad arguments, unsupported platform) | + +Exit code `1` (WARNING) is not used; there is no "degraded but acceptable" +state for CPU vulnerability mitigations. + +## Non-root behaviour + +Running without root privileges skips MSR reads and limits access to some +kernel interfaces. When the script finds apparent vulnerabilities without root: + +- The status word becomes `UNKNOWN` instead of `CRITICAL` +- The exit code is `3` instead of `2` +- The summary says `appear vulnerable (unconfirmed, not root)` +- A `NOTE: not running as root` line is added to the long output + +**Recommendation:** always run with `sudo` for authoritative results. A +`CRITICAL` from a root-run scan is a confirmed vulnerability; an `UNKNOWN` +from a non-root scan is a signal to investigate further. + +## Hypervisor hosts + +When `NOTE: hypervisor host detected` is present, L1TF (CVE-2018-3646) and +MDS (CVE-2018-12126/12130/12127) carry significantly higher risk because +they can be exploited across VM boundaries by a malicious guest. Prioritise +remediation on these hosts. + +## Examples + +**All mitigated (root):** +``` +OK: All 31 CVE checks passed | checked=31 vulnerable=0 unknown=0 +NOTE: not a hypervisor host +``` +Exit: `0` + +**Two CVEs vulnerable (root):** +``` +CRITICAL: 2/31 CVE(s) vulnerable: CVE-2018-3615 CVE-2019-11135 | checked=31 vulnerable=2 unknown=0 +NOTE: not a hypervisor host +[CRITICAL] CVE-2018-3615 (L1TF SGX): your CPU supports SGX and the microcode is not up to date +[CRITICAL] CVE-2019-11135 (TAA): Your kernel doesn't support TAA mitigation, update it +``` +Exit: `2` + +**Apparent vulnerabilities, non-root scan:** +``` +UNKNOWN: 2/31 CVE(s) appear vulnerable (unconfirmed, not root): CVE-2018-3615 CVE-2019-11135 | checked=31 vulnerable=2 unknown=0 +NOTE: not a hypervisor host +NOTE: not running as root; MSR reads skipped, results may be incomplete +[CRITICAL] CVE-2018-3615 (L1TF SGX): your CPU supports SGX and the microcode is not up to date +[CRITICAL] CVE-2019-11135 (TAA): Your kernel doesn't support TAA mitigation, update it +``` +Exit: `3` + +**Inconclusive checks, paranoid mode, VMM host:** +``` +UNKNOWN: 3/31 CVE checks inconclusive | checked=31 vulnerable=0 unknown=3 +NOTE: paranoid mode active — stricter mitigation requirements applied +NOTE: hypervisor host detected (kvm); L1TF/MDS severity is elevated +[UNKNOWN] CVE-2018-3646 (L1TF VMM): SMT is enabled on a hypervisor host, not mitigated under paranoid mode +``` +Exit: `3` diff --git a/doc/batch_prometheus.md b/doc/batch_prometheus.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..07238c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/batch_prometheus.md @@ -0,0 +1,377 @@ +# Prometheus Batch Mode — Fleet Operator Guide + +`--batch prometheus` emits Prometheus text-format metrics that can be fed into any +Prometheus-compatible monitoring stack. It is designed for **fleet-scale security +monitoring**: run the script periodically on every host, push the output to a +Prometheus Pushgateway (or drop it into a node_exporter textfile directory), then +alert and dashboard from Prometheus/Grafana like any other infrastructure metric. + +--- + +## Quick start + +### Pushgateway (recommended for cron/batch fleet scans) + +```sh +#!/bin/sh +PUSHGATEWAY="http://pushgateway.internal:9091" +INSTANCE=$(hostname -f) + +spectre-meltdown-checker.sh --batch prometheus \ + | curl --silent --show-error --data-binary @- \ + "${PUSHGATEWAY}/metrics/job/smc/instance/${INSTANCE}" +``` + +Run this as root via cron or a systemd timer on every host. The Pushgateway +retains the last pushed value, so Prometheus scrapes it on its own schedule. +A stale-data alert (`smc_last_scan_timestamp_seconds`) catches hosts that stopped +reporting. + +### node_exporter textfile collector + +```sh +#!/bin/sh +TEXTFILE_DIR="/var/lib/node_exporter/textfile_collector" +TMP="${TEXTFILE_DIR}/smc.prom.$$" + +spectre-meltdown-checker.sh --batch prometheus > "$TMP" +mv "$TMP" "${TEXTFILE_DIR}/smc.prom" +``` + +The atomic `mv` prevents node_exporter from reading a partially written file. +node_exporter must be started with `--collector.textfile.directory` pointing at +`TEXTFILE_DIR`. + +--- + +## Metric reference + +All metric names are prefixed `smc_` (spectre-meltdown-checker). All metrics +are **gauges**: they represent the state at the time of the scan, not a running +counter. + +--- + +### `smc_build_info` + +Script metadata. Always value `1`; all data is in labels. + +| Label | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---| +| `version` | string | Script version (e.g. `25.30.0250400123`) | +| `mode` | `live` / `offline` | `live` = running on the active kernel; `offline` = inspecting a kernel image | +| `run_as_root` | `true` / `false` | Whether the script ran as root. Non-root scans skip MSR reads and may miss mitigations | +| `paranoid` | `true` / `false` | `--paranoid` mode: stricter criteria (e.g. requires SMT disabled) | +| `sysfs_only` | `true` / `false` | `--sysfs-only` mode: only the kernel's own sysfs report was used, not independent detection | +| `reduced_accuracy` | `true` / `false` | Kernel information was incomplete (no kernel image, config, or map); some checks may be less precise | +| `mocked` | `true` / `false` | Debug/test mode: CPU values were overridden. Results do **not** reflect the real system | + +**Example:** +``` +smc_build_info{version="25.30.0250400123",mode="live",run_as_root="true",paranoid="false",sysfs_only="false",reduced_accuracy="false",mocked="false"} 1 +``` + +**Important labels for fleet operators:** + +- `run_as_root="false"` means the scan was incomplete. Treat those results as + lower confidence and alert separately. +- `sysfs_only="true"` means the script trusted the kernel's self-report without + independent verification. The kernel may be wrong about its own mitigation + status (known to happen on older kernels). +- `paranoid="true"` raises the bar: a host with `paranoid="true"` and + `vulnerable_count=0` is held to a higher standard than one with `paranoid="false"`. + Do not compare counts across hosts with different `paranoid` values. +- `mocked="true"` must never appear on a production host; if it does, the results + are fabricated and every downstream alert is unreliable. + +--- + +### `smc_system_info` + +Operating system and kernel metadata. Always value `1`. + +Absent in offline mode when neither `uname -r` nor `uname -m` is available. + +| Label | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---| +| `kernel_release` | string | Output of `uname -r` (live mode only) | +| `kernel_arch` | string | Output of `uname -m` (live mode only) | +| `hypervisor_host` | `true` / `false` | Whether this machine is detected as a hypervisor host (running KVM, Xen, VMware, etc.) | + +**Example:** +``` +smc_system_info{kernel_release="5.15.0-100-generic",kernel_arch="x86_64",hypervisor_host="false"} 1 +``` + +**`hypervisor_host`** materially changes the risk profile of several CVEs. +L1TF (CVE-2018-3646) and MDS (CVE-2018-12126/12130/12127) are significantly more +severe on hypervisor hosts because they can be exploited across VM boundaries by +a malicious guest. Always prioritise remediation on hosts where +`hypervisor_host="true"`. + +--- + +### `smc_cpu_info` + +CPU hardware and microcode metadata. Always value `1`. Absent when `--no-hw` +is used. + +| Label | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---| +| `vendor` | string | CPU vendor (e.g. `Intel`, `AuthenticAMD`) | +| `model` | string | CPU friendly name from `/proc/cpuinfo` | +| `family` | integer string | CPU family number | +| `model_id` | integer string | CPU model number | +| `stepping` | integer string | CPU stepping number | +| `cpuid` | hex string | Full CPUID value (e.g. `0x000906ed`); absent on some ARM CPUs | +| `codename` | string | Intel CPU codename (e.g. `Coffee Lake`); absent on AMD and ARM | +| `smt` | `true` / `false` | Whether SMT (HyperThreading) is currently enabled | +| `microcode` | hex string | Installed microcode version (e.g. `0xf4`) | +| `microcode_latest` | hex string | Latest known-good microcode version from the firmware database | +| `microcode_up_to_date` | `true` / `false` | Whether `microcode == microcode_latest` | +| `microcode_blacklisted` | `true` / `false` | Whether the installed microcode is known to cause problems and should be rolled back | + +**Example:** +``` +smc_cpu_info{vendor="Intel",model="Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-9700K CPU @ 3.60GHz",family="6",model_id="158",stepping="13",cpuid="0x000906ed",codename="Coffee Lake",smt="true",microcode="0xf4",microcode_latest="0xf4",microcode_up_to_date="true",microcode_blacklisted="false"} 1 +``` + +**Microcode labels:** + +- `microcode_up_to_date="false"` means a newer microcode is available in the + firmware database. This does not necessarily mean the system is vulnerable + (the current microcode may still provide all required mitigations), but it + warrants investigation. +- `microcode_blacklisted="true"` means the installed microcode is known to + cause system instability or incorrect behaviour and must be rolled back + immediately. Treat this as a P1 incident. +- `microcode_latest` may be absent if the CPU is not in the firmware database + (very new, very old, or exotic CPUs). + +**`smt`** affects the risk level of several CVEs (MDS, L1TF). For those CVEs, +full mitigation requires disabling SMT in addition to kernel and microcode updates. +The script accounts for this in its status assessment; use this label to audit +which hosts still have SMT enabled. + +--- + +### `smc_vulnerability_status` + +One time series per CVE. The **numeric value** encodes the check result: + +| Value | Meaning | +|---|---| +| `0` | Not vulnerable (CPU is unaffected by design, or all required mitigations are in place) | +| `1` | Vulnerable (mitigations are missing or insufficient) | +| `2` | Unknown (the script could not determine the status, e.g. due to missing kernel info or insufficient privileges) | + +| Label | Values | Meaning | +|---|---|---| +| `cve` | CVE ID string | The CVE identifier (e.g. `CVE-2017-5753`) | +| `name` | string | Human-readable CVE name and aliases (e.g. `Spectre Variant 1, bounds check bypass`) | +| `cpu_affected` | `true` / `false` | Whether this CPU's hardware design is concerned by this CVE | + +**Example:** +``` +smc_vulnerability_status{cve="CVE-2017-5753",name="Spectre Variant 1, bounds check bypass",cpu_affected="true"} 0 +smc_vulnerability_status{cve="CVE-2017-5715",name="Spectre Variant 2, branch target injection",cpu_affected="true"} 1 +smc_vulnerability_status{cve="CVE-2022-29900",name="Retbleed, arbitrary speculative code execution with return instructions (AMD)",cpu_affected="false"} 0 +``` + +**`cpu_affected` explained:** + +A value of `0` with `cpu_affected="false"` means the CPU hardware is architecturally +immune to this CVE — no patch was needed or applied. + +A value of `0` with `cpu_affected="true"` means the CPU has the hardware weakness +but all required mitigations (kernel, microcode, or both) are in place. + +This distinction is important when auditing a fleet: if you need to verify that +all at-risk systems are patched, filter on `cpu_affected="true"` to exclude +hardware-immune systems from the analysis. + +--- + +### `smc_vulnerable_count` + +Number of CVEs with status `1` (vulnerable) in this scan. Value is `0` when +no CVEs are vulnerable. + +--- + +### `smc_unknown_count` + +Number of CVEs with status `2` (unknown) in this scan. A non-zero value +typically means the scan lacked sufficient privileges or kernel information. +Treat unknown the same as vulnerable for alerting purposes. + +--- + +### `smc_last_scan_timestamp_seconds` + +Unix timestamp (seconds since epoch) when the scan completed. Use this to +detect hosts that have stopped reporting. + +--- + +## Alerting rules + +```yaml +groups: + - name: spectre_meltdown_checker + rules: + + # Fire when any CVE is confirmed vulnerable + - alert: SMCVulnerable + expr: smc_vulnerable_count > 0 + for: 0m + labels: + severity: critical + annotations: + summary: "{{ $labels.instance }} has {{ $value }} vulnerable CVE(s)" + description: > + Run spectre-meltdown-checker.sh interactively on {{ $labels.instance }} + for remediation guidance. + + # Fire when status is unknown (usually means scan ran without root) + - alert: SMCUnknown + expr: smc_unknown_count > 0 + for: 0m + labels: + severity: warning + annotations: + summary: "{{ $labels.instance }} has {{ $value }} CVE(s) with unknown status" + description: > + Ensure the checker runs as root on {{ $labels.instance }}. + + # Fire when a host stops reporting (scan not run in 8 days) + - alert: SMCScanStale + expr: time() - smc_last_scan_timestamp_seconds > 8 * 86400 + for: 0m + labels: + severity: warning + annotations: + summary: "{{ $labels.instance }} has not reported scan results in 8 days" + + # Fire when installed microcode is known-bad + - alert: SMCMicrocodeBlacklisted + expr: smc_cpu_info{microcode_blacklisted="true"} == 1 + for: 0m + labels: + severity: critical + annotations: + summary: "{{ $labels.instance }} is running blacklisted microcode" + description: > + The installed microcode ({{ $labels.microcode }}) is known to cause + instability. Roll back to the previous version immediately. + + # Fire when scan ran without root (results may be incomplete) + - alert: SMCScanNotRoot + expr: smc_build_info{run_as_root="false"} == 1 + for: 0m + labels: + severity: warning + annotations: + summary: "{{ $labels.instance }} scan ran without root privileges" + + # Fire when mocked data is detected on a production host + - alert: SMCScanMocked + expr: smc_build_info{mocked="true"} == 1 + for: 0m + labels: + severity: critical + annotations: + summary: "{{ $labels.instance }} scan results are mocked and unreliable" +``` + +--- + +## Useful PromQL queries + +```promql +# All vulnerable CVEs across the fleet +smc_vulnerability_status == 1 + +# Vulnerable CVEs on hosts that are also hypervisor hosts (highest priority) +smc_vulnerability_status == 1 + * on(instance) group_left(hypervisor_host) + smc_system_info{hypervisor_host="true"} + +# Vulnerable CVEs on affected CPUs only (excludes hardware-immune systems) +smc_vulnerability_status{cpu_affected="true"} == 1 + +# Fleet-wide: how many hosts are vulnerable to each CVE +count by (cve, name) (smc_vulnerability_status == 1) + +# Hosts with outdated microcode, with CPU model context +smc_cpu_info{microcode_up_to_date="false"} + +# Hosts with SMT still enabled (relevant for MDS/L1TF remediation) +smc_cpu_info{smt="true"} + +# For a specific CVE: hosts affected by hardware but fully mitigated +smc_vulnerability_status{cve="CVE-2018-3646", cpu_affected="true"} == 0 + +# Proportion of fleet that is fully clean (no vulnerable, no unknown) +( + count(smc_vulnerable_count == 0 and smc_unknown_count == 0) + / + count(smc_vulnerable_count >= 0) +) + +# Hosts where scan ran without root — results less reliable +smc_build_info{run_as_root="false"} + +# Hosts with sysfs_only mode — independent detection was skipped +smc_build_info{sysfs_only="true"} + +# Vulnerable CVEs joined with kernel release for patch tracking +smc_vulnerability_status == 1 + * on(instance) group_left(kernel_release) + smc_system_info + +# Vulnerable CVEs joined with CPU model and microcode version +smc_vulnerability_status == 1 + * on(instance) group_left(vendor, model, microcode, microcode_up_to_date) + smc_cpu_info +``` + +--- + +## Caveats and edge cases + +**Offline mode (`--kernel`)** +`smc_system_info` will have no `kernel_release` or `kernel_arch` labels (those +come from `uname`, which reports the running kernel, not the inspected one). +`mode="offline"` in `smc_build_info` signals this. Offline mode is primarily +useful for pre-deployment auditing, not fleet runtime monitoring. + +**`--no-hw`** +`smc_cpu_info` is not emitted. CPU and microcode labels are absent from all +queries. CVE checks that rely on hardware capability detection (`cap_*` flags, +MSR reads) will report `unknown` status. + +**`--sysfs-only`** +The script trusts the kernel's sysfs report (`/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities/`) +without running its own independent detection. Some older kernels are known to +misreport their mitigation status. `sysfs_only="true"` in `smc_build_info` +flags this condition. Do not use `--sysfs-only` for production fleet monitoring. + +**`--paranoid`** +Enables defense-in-depth checks beyond the security community consensus (e.g. +requires SMT to be disabled, IBPB always-on). A host is only `vulnerable_count=0` +under `paranoid` if it meets this higher bar. Do not compare `vulnerable_count` +across hosts with different `paranoid` values. + +**`reduced_accuracy`** +Set when the kernel image, config file, or System.map could not be read. Some +checks fall back to weaker heuristics and may report `unknown` for CVEs that are +actually mitigated. This typically happens when the script runs without root or +on a kernel with an inaccessible image. + +**Label stability** +Prometheus identifies time series by their full label set. If a script upgrade +adds or renames a label (e.g. a new `smc_cpu_info` label is added for a new CVE), +Prometheus will create a new time series and the old one will become stale. Plan +for this in long-retention dashboards by using `group_left` joins rather than +hardcoding label matchers. diff --git a/spectre-meltdown-checker.sh b/spectre-meltdown-checker.sh index d58c44a..a85d43c 100755 --- a/spectre-meltdown-checker.sh +++ b/spectre-meltdown-checker.sh @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ # # Stephane Lesimple # -VERSION='26.32.0406707' +VERSION='26.32.0408839' # --- Common paths and basedirs --- readonly VULN_SYSFS_BASE="/sys/devices/system/cpu/vulnerabilities" @@ -27,8 +27,7 @@ trap 'exit_cleanup' EXIT trap 'pr_warn "interrupted, cleaning up..."; exit_cleanup; exit 1' INT # Clean up temporary files and undo module/mount side effects on exit exit_cleanup() { - local saved_ret - saved_ret=$? + local saved_ret=$? # cleanup the temp decompressed config & kernel image [ -n "${g_dumped_config:-}" ] && [ -f "$g_dumped_config" ] && rm -f "$g_dumped_config" [ -n "${g_kerneltmp:-}" ] && [ -f "$g_kerneltmp" ] && rm -f "$g_kerneltmp" @@ -59,64 +58,60 @@ fi show_usage() { # shellcheck disable=SC2086 cat <] [--config ] [--map ]> --live - Offline mode: $(basename $0) [options] <[--kernel ] [--config ] [--map ]> - Modes: - Two modes are available. + * Live mode: $(basename $0) [options] [--kernel ] [--config ] [--map ] + Inspect the currently running kernel within the context of the CPU it's running on. + You can optionally specify --kernel, --config, or --map to help the script locate files it couldn't auto-detect - First mode is the "live" mode (default), it does its best to find information about the currently running kernel. - To run under this mode, just start the script without any option (you can also use --live explicitly) + * No-runtime mode: $(basename $0) [options] --no-runtime <--kernel > [--config ] [--map ] + Inspect the CPU hardware, but skips all running-kernel artifacts (/sys, /proc, dmesg). + Use this when you have a kernel image different from the kernel you're running but want to check it against this CPU. - Second mode is the "offline" mode, where you can inspect a non-running kernel. - This mode is automatically enabled when you specify the location of the kernel file, config and System.map files: + * No-hardware mode: $(basename $0) [options] --no-hw <--kernel > [--config ] [--map ] + Ignore both CPU hardware and running-kernel artifacts. Use this for pure static analysis of a kernel image, + for example when inspecting a kernel targeted for another system or CPU. - --kernel kernel_file specify a (possibly compressed) Linux or BSD kernel file - --config kernel_config specify a kernel config file (Linux only) - --map kernel_map_file specify a kernel System.map file (Linux only) + * Hardware-only mode: $(basename $0) [options] --hw-only + Only inspect the CPU hardware, and report information and affectedness per vulnerability. - If you want to use live mode while specifying the location of the kernel, config or map file yourself, - you can add --live to the above options, to tell the script to run in live mode instead of the offline mode, - which is enabled by default when at least one file is specified on the command line. + Vulnerability selection: + --variant VARIANT specify which variant you'd like to check, by default all variants are checked. + can be used multiple times (e.g. --variant 3a --variant l1tf). For a list use 'help'. + --cve CVE specify which CVE you'd like to check, by default all supported CVEs are checked + can be used multiple times (e.g. --cve CVE-2017-5753 --cve CVE-2020-0543) - Options: - --no-color don't use color codes - --verbose, -v increase verbosity level, possibly several times - --explain produce an additional human-readable explanation of actions to take to mitigate a vulnerability + Check scope: + --no-sysfs don't use the /sys interface even if present [Linux] + --sysfs-only only use the /sys interface, don't run our own checks [Linux] + + Strictness: --paranoid require all mitigations to be enabled to the fullest extent, including those that are not strictly necessary but provide defense in depth (e.g. SMT disabled, IBPB always-on); without this flag, the script follows the security community consensus --extra run additional checks for issues that don't have a CVE but are still security-relevant, such as compile-time mitigations not enabled by default (e.g. Straight-Line Speculation) - --no-sysfs don't use the /sys interface even if present [Linux] - --sysfs-only only use the /sys interface, don't run our own checks [Linux] - --coreos special mode for CoreOS (use an ephemeral toolbox to inspect kernel) [Linux] - + Hardware and platform: + --cpu [#,all] interact with CPUID and MSR of CPU core number #, or all (default: CPU core 0) + --vmm [auto,yes,no] override the detection of the presence of a hypervisor, default: auto + --allow-msr-write allow probing for write-only MSRs, this might produce kernel logs or be blocked by your system --arch-prefix PREFIX specify a prefix for cross-inspecting a kernel of a different arch, for example "aarch64-linux-gnu-", so that invoked tools will be prefixed with this (i.e. aarch64-linux-gnu-objdump) - --batch text produce machine readable output, this is the default if --batch is specified alone - --batch short produce only one line with the vulnerabilities separated by spaces - --batch json produce JSON output formatted for Puppet, Ansible, Chef... - --batch nrpe produce machine readable output formatted for NRPE - --batch prometheus produce output for consumption by prometheus-node-exporter + --coreos special mode for CoreOS (use an ephemeral toolbox to inspect kernel) [Linux] - --variant VARIANT specify which variant you'd like to check, by default all variants are checked. - can be used multiple times (e.g. --variant 3a --variant l1tf) - for a list of supported VARIANT parameters, use --variant help - --cve CVE specify which CVE you'd like to check, by default all supported CVEs are checked - can be used multiple times (e.g. --cve CVE-2017-5753 --cve CVE-2020-0543) - --hw-only only check for CPU information, don't check for any variant - --no-hw skip CPU information and checks, if you're inspecting a kernel not to be run on this host - --vmm [auto,yes,no] override the detection of the presence of a hypervisor, default: auto - --no-intel-db don't use the builtin Intel DB of affected processors - --allow-msr-write allow probing for write-only MSRs, this might produce kernel logs or be blocked by your system - --cpu [#,all] interact with CPUID and MSR of CPU core number #, or all (default: CPU core 0) + Output: + --batch FORMAT produce machine readable output; FORMAT is one of: + text (default), short, json, json-terse, nrpe, prometheus + --no-color don't use color codes + --verbose, -v increase verbosity level, possibly several times + --explain produce an additional human-readable explanation of actions to take to mitigate a vulnerability + + Firmware database: --update-fwdb update our local copy of the CPU microcodes versions database (using the awesome MCExtractor project and the Intel firmwares GitHub repository) --update-builtin-fwdb same as --update-fwdb but update builtin DB inside the script itself + + Debug: --dump-mock-data used to mimick a CPU on an other system, mainly used to help debugging this script Return codes: @@ -168,7 +163,7 @@ g_os=$(uname -s) opt_kernel='' opt_config='' opt_map='' -opt_live=-1 +opt_runtime=1 opt_no_color=0 opt_batch=0 opt_batch_format='text' @@ -188,11 +183,21 @@ opt_explain=0 opt_paranoid=0 opt_extra=0 opt_mock=0 -opt_intel_db=1 g_critical=0 g_unknown=0 -g_nrpe_vuln='' +g_nrpe_total=0 +g_nrpe_vuln_count=0 +g_nrpe_unk_count=0 +g_nrpe_vuln_ids='' +g_nrpe_vuln_details='' +g_nrpe_unk_details='' +g_smc_vuln_output='' +g_smc_ok_count=0 +g_smc_vuln_count=0 +g_smc_unk_count=0 +g_smc_system_info_line='' +g_smc_cpu_info_line='' # CVE Registry: single source of truth for all CVE metadata. # Fields: cve_id|json_key_name|affected_var_suffix|complete_name_and_aliases @@ -2014,7 +2019,7 @@ while [ -n "${1:-}" ]; do opt_arch_prefix="$2" shift 2 elif [ "$1" = "--live" ]; then - opt_live=1 + # deprecated, kept for backward compatibility (live is now the default) shift elif [ "$1" = "--no-color" ]; then opt_no_color=1 @@ -2041,15 +2046,16 @@ while [ -n "${1:-}" ]; do elif [ "$1" = "--hw-only" ]; then opt_hw_only=1 shift + elif [ "$1" = "--no-runtime" ]; then + opt_runtime=0 + shift elif [ "$1" = "--no-hw" ]; then opt_no_hw=1 + opt_runtime=0 shift elif [ "$1" = "--allow-msr-write" ]; then opt_allow_msr_write=1 shift - elif [ "$1" = "--no-intel-db" ]; then - opt_intel_db=0 - shift elif [ "$1" = "--cpu" ]; then opt_cpu=$2 if [ "$opt_cpu" != all ]; then @@ -2083,7 +2089,7 @@ while [ -n "${1:-}" ]; do opt_no_color=1 shift case "$1" in - text | short | nrpe | json | prometheus) + text | short | nrpe | json | json-terse | prometheus) opt_batch_format="$1" shift ;; @@ -2091,7 +2097,7 @@ while [ -n "${1:-}" ]; do '') ;; # allow nothing at all *) echo "$0: error: unknown batch format '$1'" >&2 - echo "$0: error: --batch expects a format from: text, nrpe, json" >&2 + echo "$0: error: --batch expects a format from: text, short, nrpe, json, json-terse, prometheus" >&2 exit 255 ;; esac @@ -2301,13 +2307,14 @@ if [ "$opt_no_hw" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_hw_only" = 1 ]; then exit 255 fi -if [ "$opt_live" = -1 ]; then - if [ -n "$opt_kernel" ] || [ -n "$opt_config" ] || [ -n "$opt_map" ]; then - # no --live specified and we have a least one of the kernel/config/map files on the cmdline: offline mode - opt_live=0 - else - opt_live=1 - fi +if [ "$opt_runtime" = 0 ] && [ "$opt_sysfs_only" = 1 ]; then + pr_warn "Incompatible options specified (--no-runtime and --sysfs-only), aborting" + exit 255 +fi + +if [ "$opt_runtime" = 0 ] && [ -z "$opt_kernel" ] && [ -z "$opt_config" ] && [ -z "$opt_map" ]; then + pr_warn "Option --no-runtime requires at least one of --kernel, --config, or --map" + exit 255 fi # >>>>>> libs/240_output_status.sh <<<<<< @@ -2337,6 +2344,256 @@ pstatus() { # >>>>>> libs/250_output_emitters.sh <<<<<< # vim: set ts=4 sw=4 sts=4 et: +# --- JSON helper functions --- + +# Escape a string for use in a JSON value (handles backslashes, double quotes, newlines, tabs) +# Args: $1=string +# Prints: escaped string (without surrounding quotes) +_json_escape() { + printf '%s' "$1" | sed -e 's/\\/\\\\/g' -e 's/"/\\"/g' -e 's/ /\\t/g' | tr '\n' ' ' +} + +# Escape a string for use as a Prometheus label value (handles backslashes, double quotes, newlines) +# Args: $1=string +# Prints: escaped string (without surrounding quotes) +_prom_escape() { + printf '%s' "$1" | sed -e 's/\\/\\\\/g' -e 's/"/\\"/g' | tr '\n' ' ' +} + +# Convert a shell capability value to a JSON token +# Args: $1=value (1=true, 0=false, -1/empty=null, other string=quoted string) +# Prints: JSON token +_json_cap() { + case "${1:-}" in + 1) printf 'true' ;; + 0) printf 'false' ;; + -1 | '') printf 'null' ;; + *) printf '"%s"' "$(_json_escape "$1")" ;; + esac +} + +# Emit a JSON string value or null +# Args: $1=string (empty=null) +# Prints: JSON token ("escaped string" or null) +_json_str() { + if [ -n "${1:-}" ]; then + printf '"%s"' "$(_json_escape "$1")" + else + printf 'null' + fi +} + +# Emit a JSON number value or null +# Args: $1=number (empty=null) +# Prints: JSON token +_json_num() { + if [ -n "${1:-}" ]; then + printf '%s' "$1" + else + printf 'null' + fi +} + +# Emit a JSON boolean value or null +# Args: $1=value (1/0/empty) +# Prints: JSON token +_json_bool() { + case "${1:-}" in + 1) printf 'true' ;; + 0) printf 'false' ;; + *) printf 'null' ;; + esac +} + +# --- JSON section builders (comprehensive format) --- + +# Build the "meta" section of the comprehensive JSON output +# Sets: g_json_meta +# shellcheck disable=SC2034 +_build_json_meta() { + local timestamp mode + timestamp=$(date -u '+%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ' 2>/dev/null || echo "unknown") + if [ "$opt_no_hw" = 1 ]; then + mode="no-hw" + elif [ "$opt_runtime" = 0 ]; then + mode="no-runtime" + else + mode="live" + fi + local run_as_root + if [ "$(id -u)" -eq 0 ]; then + run_as_root='true' + else + run_as_root='false' + fi + g_json_meta=$(printf '{"script_version":%s,"format_version":1,"timestamp":%s,"os":%s,"mode":"%s","run_as_root":%s,"reduced_accuracy":%s,"paranoid":%s,"sysfs_only":%s,"no_hw":%s,"extra":%s}' \ + "$(_json_str "$VERSION")" \ + "$(_json_str "$timestamp")" \ + "$(_json_str "$g_os")" \ + "$mode" \ + "$run_as_root" \ + "$(_json_bool "${g_bad_accuracy:-0}")" \ + "$(_json_bool "$opt_paranoid")" \ + "$(_json_bool "$opt_sysfs_only")" \ + "$(_json_bool "$opt_no_hw")" \ + "$(_json_bool "$opt_extra")") +} + +# Build the "system" section of the comprehensive JSON output +# Sets: g_json_system +# shellcheck disable=SC2034 +_build_json_system() { + local kernel_release kernel_version kernel_arch smt_val + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then + kernel_release=$(uname -r) + kernel_version=$(uname -v) + kernel_arch=$(uname -m) + else + kernel_release='' + kernel_version='' + kernel_arch='' + fi + # SMT detection + is_cpu_smt_enabled + smt_val=$? + case $smt_val in + 0) smt_val='true' ;; + 1) smt_val='false' ;; + *) smt_val='null' ;; + esac + g_json_system=$(printf '{"kernel_release":%s,"kernel_version":%s,"kernel_arch":%s,"kernel_image":%s,"kernel_config":%s,"kernel_version_string":%s,"kernel_cmdline":%s,"cpu_count":%s,"smt_enabled":%s,"hypervisor_host":%s,"hypervisor_host_reason":%s}' \ + "$(_json_str "$kernel_release")" \ + "$(_json_str "$kernel_version")" \ + "$(_json_str "$kernel_arch")" \ + "$(_json_str "${opt_kernel:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "${opt_config:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "${g_kernel_version:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "${g_kernel_cmdline:-}")" \ + "$(_json_num "${g_max_core_id:+$((g_max_core_id + 1))}")" \ + "$smt_val" \ + "$(_json_bool "${g_has_vmm:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "${g_has_vmm_reason:-}")") +} + +# Build the "cpu" section of the comprehensive JSON output +# Sets: g_json_cpu +# shellcheck disable=SC2034 +_build_json_cpu() { + local cpuid_hex ucode_hex codename caps + if [ -n "${cpu_cpuid:-}" ]; then + cpuid_hex=$(printf '0x%08x' "$cpu_cpuid") + else + cpuid_hex='' + fi + if [ -n "${cpu_ucode:-}" ]; then + ucode_hex=$(printf '0x%x' "$cpu_ucode") + else + ucode_hex='' + fi + codename='' + if is_intel; then + codename=$(get_intel_codename 2>/dev/null || true) + fi + # Build capabilities sub-object + caps=$(printf '{"spec_ctrl":%s,"ibrs":%s,"ibpb":%s,"ibpb_ret":%s,"stibp":%s,"ssbd":%s,"l1d_flush":%s,"md_clear":%s,"arch_capabilities":%s,"rdcl_no":%s,"ibrs_all":%s,"rsba":%s,"l1dflush_no":%s,"ssb_no":%s,"mds_no":%s,"taa_no":%s,"pschange_msc_no":%s,"tsx_ctrl_msr":%s,"tsx_ctrl_rtm_disable":%s,"tsx_ctrl_cpuid_clear":%s,"gds_ctrl":%s,"gds_no":%s,"gds_mitg_dis":%s,"gds_mitg_lock":%s,"rfds_no":%s,"rfds_clear":%s,"its_no":%s,"sbdr_ssdp_no":%s,"fbsdp_no":%s,"psdp_no":%s,"fb_clear":%s,"rtm":%s,"tsx_force_abort":%s,"tsx_force_abort_rtm_disable":%s,"tsx_force_abort_cpuid_clear":%s,"sgx":%s,"srbds":%s,"srbds_on":%s,"amd_ssb_no":%s,"hygon_ssb_no":%s,"ipred":%s,"rrsba":%s,"bhi":%s,"tsa_sq_no":%s,"tsa_l1_no":%s,"verw_clear":%s,"autoibrs":%s,"sbpb":%s,"avx2":%s,"avx512":%s}' \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_spec_ctrl:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_ibrs:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_ibpb:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_ibpb_ret:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_stibp:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_ssbd:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_l1df:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_md_clear:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_arch_capabilities:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_rdcl_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_ibrs_all:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_rsba:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_l1dflush_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_ssb_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_mds_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_taa_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_pschange_msc_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_tsx_ctrl_msr:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_tsx_ctrl_rtm_disable:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_tsx_ctrl_cpuid_clear:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_gds_ctrl:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_gds_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_gds_mitg_dis:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_gds_mitg_lock:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_rfds_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_rfds_clear:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_its_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_sbdr_ssdp_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_fbsdp_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_psdp_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_fb_clear:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_rtm:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_tsx_force_abort:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_tsx_force_abort_rtm_disable:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_tsx_force_abort_cpuid_clear:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_sgx:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_srbds:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_srbds_on:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_amd_ssb_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_hygon_ssb_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_ipred:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_rrsba:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_bhi:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_tsa_sq_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_tsa_l1_no:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_verw_clear:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_autoibrs:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_sbpb:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_avx2:-}")" \ + "$(_json_cap "${cap_avx512:-}")") + + g_json_cpu=$(printf '{"vendor":%s,"friendly_name":%s,"family":%s,"model":%s,"stepping":%s,"cpuid":%s,"platform_id":%s,"hybrid":%s,"codename":%s,"arm_part_list":%s,"arm_arch_list":%s,"capabilities":%s}' \ + "$(_json_str "${cpu_vendor:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "${cpu_friendly_name:-}")" \ + "$(_json_num "${cpu_family:-}")" \ + "$(_json_num "${cpu_model:-}")" \ + "$(_json_num "${cpu_stepping:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "$cpuid_hex")" \ + "$(_json_num "${cpu_platformid:-}")" \ + "$(_json_bool "${cpu_hybrid:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "$codename")" \ + "$(_json_str "${cpu_part_list:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "${cpu_arch_list:-}")" \ + "$caps") +} + +# Build the "cpu_microcode" section of the comprehensive JSON output +# Sets: g_json_cpu_microcode +# shellcheck disable=SC2034 +_build_json_cpu_microcode() { + local ucode_uptodate ucode_hex latest_hex blacklisted + if [ -n "${cpu_ucode:-}" ]; then + ucode_hex=$(printf '0x%x' "$cpu_ucode") + else + ucode_hex='' + fi + is_latest_known_ucode + case $? in + 0) ucode_uptodate='true' ;; + 1) ucode_uptodate='false' ;; + *) ucode_uptodate='null' ;; + esac + if is_ucode_blacklisted; then + blacklisted='true' + else + blacklisted='false' + fi + latest_hex="${ret_is_latest_known_ucode_version:-}" + g_json_cpu_microcode=$(printf '{"installed_version":%s,"latest_version":%s,"microcode_up_to_date":%s,"is_blacklisted":%s,"message":%s,"db_source":%s,"db_info":%s}' \ + "$(_json_str "$ucode_hex")" \ + "$(_json_str "$latest_hex")" \ + "$ucode_uptodate" \ + "$blacklisted" \ + "$(_json_str "${ret_is_latest_known_ucode_latest:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "${g_mcedb_source:-}")" \ + "$(_json_str "${g_mcedb_info:-}")") +} + # --- Format-specific batch emitters --- # Emit a single CVE result as plain text @@ -2354,45 +2611,195 @@ _emit_short() { g_short_output="${g_short_output}$1 " } -# Append a CVE result as a JSON object to the batch output buffer +# Append a CVE result as a terse JSON object to the batch output buffer # Args: $1=cve $2=aka $3=status(UNK|VULN|OK) $4=description # Sets: g_json_output # Callers: pvulnstatus -_emit_json() { +_emit_json_terse() { local is_vuln esc_name esc_infos case "$3" in UNK) is_vuln="null" ;; VULN) is_vuln="true" ;; OK) is_vuln="false" ;; *) - echo "$0: error: unknown status '$3' passed to _emit_json()" >&2 + echo "$0: error: unknown status '$3' passed to _emit_json_terse()" >&2 exit 255 ;; esac - # escape backslashes and double quotes for valid JSON strings - esc_name=$(printf '%s' "$2" | sed -e 's/\\/\\\\/g' -e 's/"/\\"/g') - esc_infos=$(printf '%s' "$4" | sed -e 's/\\/\\\\/g' -e 's/"/\\"/g') + esc_name=$(_json_escape "$2") + esc_infos=$(_json_escape "$4") [ -z "$g_json_output" ] && g_json_output='[' g_json_output="${g_json_output}{\"NAME\":\"$esc_name\",\"CVE\":\"$1\",\"VULNERABLE\":$is_vuln,\"INFOS\":\"$esc_infos\"}," } -# Append vulnerable CVE IDs to the NRPE output buffer -# Args: $1=cve $2=aka $3=status $4=description -# Sets: g_nrpe_vuln +# Append a CVE result as a comprehensive JSON object to the batch output buffer +# Args: $1=cve $2=aka $3=status(UNK|VULN|OK) $4=description +# Sets: g_json_vulns # Callers: pvulnstatus -_emit_nrpe() { - [ "$3" = VULN ] && g_nrpe_vuln="$g_nrpe_vuln $1" +_emit_json_full() { + local is_vuln esc_name esc_infos aliases cpu_affected sysfs_status sysfs_msg + case "$3" in + UNK) is_vuln="null" ;; + VULN) is_vuln="true" ;; + OK) is_vuln="false" ;; + *) + echo "$0: error: unknown status '$3' passed to _emit_json_full()" >&2 + exit 255 + ;; + esac + esc_name=$(_json_escape "$2") + esc_infos=$(_json_escape "$4") + aliases=$(_cve_registry_field "$1" 4) + + # CPU affection status (cached, cheap) + if is_cpu_affected "$1" 2>/dev/null; then + cpu_affected='true' + else + cpu_affected='false' + fi + + # sysfs status: use the value captured by this CVE's check function, then clear it + # so it doesn't leak into the next CVE that might not call sys_interface_check + sysfs_status="${g_json_cve_sysfs_status:-}" + sysfs_msg="${g_json_cve_sysfs_msg:-}" + + : "${g_json_vulns:=}" + g_json_vulns="${g_json_vulns}{\"cve\":\"$1\",\"name\":\"$esc_name\",\"aliases\":$(_json_str "$aliases"),\"cpu_affected\":$cpu_affected,\"status\":\"$3\",\"vulnerable\":$is_vuln,\"info\":\"$esc_infos\",\"sysfs_status\":$(_json_str "$sysfs_status"),\"sysfs_message\":$(_json_str "$sysfs_msg")}," } -# Append a CVE result as a Prometheus metric to the batch output buffer +# Accumulate a CVE result into the NRPE output buffers # Args: $1=cve $2=aka $3=status $4=description -# Sets: g_prometheus_output +# Sets: g_nrpe_total, g_nrpe_vuln_count, g_nrpe_unk_count, g_nrpe_vuln_ids, g_nrpe_vuln_details, g_nrpe_unk_details +# Callers: pvulnstatus +_emit_nrpe() { + g_nrpe_total=$((g_nrpe_total + 1)) + case "$3" in + VULN) + g_nrpe_vuln_count=$((g_nrpe_vuln_count + 1)) + g_nrpe_vuln_ids="${g_nrpe_vuln_ids:+$g_nrpe_vuln_ids }$1" + g_nrpe_vuln_details="${g_nrpe_vuln_details:+$g_nrpe_vuln_details\n}[CRITICAL] $1 ($2): $4" + ;; + UNK) + g_nrpe_unk_count=$((g_nrpe_unk_count + 1)) + g_nrpe_unk_details="${g_nrpe_unk_details:+$g_nrpe_unk_details\n}[UNKNOWN] $1 ($2): $4" + ;; + esac +} + +# Append a CVE result as a Prometheus gauge to the batch output buffer +# Status is encoded numerically: 0=not_vulnerable, 1=vulnerable, 2=unknown +# Args: $1=cve $2=aka $3=status(UNK|VULN|OK) $4=description +# Sets: g_smc_vuln_output, g_smc_ok_count, g_smc_vuln_count, g_smc_unk_count # Callers: pvulnstatus _emit_prometheus() { - local esc_info - # escape backslashes and double quotes for Prometheus label values - esc_info=$(printf '%s' "$4" | sed -e 's/\\/\\\\/g' -e 's/"/\\"/g') - g_prometheus_output="${g_prometheus_output:+$g_prometheus_output\n}specex_vuln_status{name=\"$2\",cve=\"$1\",status=\"$3\",info=\"$esc_info\"} 1" + local numeric_status cpu_affected full_name esc_name + case "$3" in + OK) + numeric_status=0 + g_smc_ok_count=$((g_smc_ok_count + 1)) + ;; + VULN) + numeric_status=1 + g_smc_vuln_count=$((g_smc_vuln_count + 1)) + ;; + UNK) + numeric_status=2 + g_smc_unk_count=$((g_smc_unk_count + 1)) + ;; + *) + echo "$0: error: unknown status '$3' passed to _emit_prometheus()" >&2 + exit 255 + ;; + esac + if is_cpu_affected "$1" 2>/dev/null; then + cpu_affected='true' + else + cpu_affected='false' + fi + # use the complete CVE name (field 4) rather than the short aka key (field 2) + full_name=$(_cve_registry_field "$1" 4) + esc_name=$(_prom_escape "$full_name") + g_smc_vuln_output="${g_smc_vuln_output:+$g_smc_vuln_output\n}smc_vulnerability_status{cve=\"$1\",name=\"$esc_name\",cpu_affected=\"$cpu_affected\"} $numeric_status" +} + +# Build the smc_system_info Prometheus metric line +# Sets: g_smc_system_info_line +# Callers: src/main.sh (after check_cpu / check_cpu_vulnerabilities) +# shellcheck disable=SC2034 +_build_prometheus_system_info() { + local kernel_release kernel_arch hypervisor_host sys_labels + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then + kernel_release=$(uname -r 2>/dev/null || true) + kernel_arch=$(uname -m 2>/dev/null || true) + else + kernel_release='' + kernel_arch='' + fi + case "${g_has_vmm:-}" in + 1) hypervisor_host='true' ;; + 0) hypervisor_host='false' ;; + *) hypervisor_host='' ;; + esac + sys_labels='' + [ -n "$kernel_release" ] && sys_labels="${sys_labels:+$sys_labels,}kernel_release=\"$(_prom_escape "$kernel_release")\"" + [ -n "$kernel_arch" ] && sys_labels="${sys_labels:+$sys_labels,}kernel_arch=\"$(_prom_escape "$kernel_arch")\"" + [ -n "$hypervisor_host" ] && sys_labels="${sys_labels:+$sys_labels,}hypervisor_host=\"$hypervisor_host\"" + [ -n "$sys_labels" ] && g_smc_system_info_line="smc_system_info{$sys_labels} 1" +} + +# Build the smc_cpu_info Prometheus metric line +# Sets: g_smc_cpu_info_line +# Callers: src/main.sh (after check_cpu / check_cpu_vulnerabilities) +# shellcheck disable=SC2034 +_build_prometheus_cpu_info() { + local cpuid_hex ucode_hex ucode_latest_hex ucode_uptodate ucode_blacklisted codename smt_val cpu_labels + if [ -n "${cpu_cpuid:-}" ]; then + cpuid_hex=$(printf '0x%08x' "$cpu_cpuid") + else + cpuid_hex='' + fi + if [ -n "${cpu_ucode:-}" ]; then + ucode_hex=$(printf '0x%x' "$cpu_ucode") + else + ucode_hex='' + fi + is_latest_known_ucode + case $? in + 0) ucode_uptodate='true' ;; + 1) ucode_uptodate='false' ;; + *) ucode_uptodate='' ;; + esac + ucode_latest_hex="${ret_is_latest_known_ucode_version:-}" + if is_ucode_blacklisted; then + ucode_blacklisted='true' + else + ucode_blacklisted='false' + fi + codename='' + if is_intel; then + codename=$(get_intel_codename 2>/dev/null || true) + fi + is_cpu_smt_enabled + case $? in + 0) smt_val='true' ;; + 1) smt_val='false' ;; + *) smt_val='' ;; + esac + cpu_labels='' + [ -n "${cpu_vendor:-}" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}vendor=\"$(_prom_escape "$cpu_vendor")\"" + [ -n "${cpu_friendly_name:-}" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}model=\"$(_prom_escape "$cpu_friendly_name")\"" + [ -n "${cpu_family:-}" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}family=\"$cpu_family\"" + [ -n "${cpu_model:-}" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}model_id=\"$cpu_model\"" + [ -n "${cpu_stepping:-}" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}stepping=\"$cpu_stepping\"" + [ -n "$cpuid_hex" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}cpuid=\"$cpuid_hex\"" + [ -n "$codename" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}codename=\"$(_prom_escape "$codename")\"" + [ -n "$smt_val" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}smt=\"$smt_val\"" + [ -n "$ucode_hex" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}microcode=\"$ucode_hex\"" + [ -n "$ucode_latest_hex" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}microcode_latest=\"$ucode_latest_hex\"" + [ -n "$ucode_uptodate" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}microcode_up_to_date=\"$ucode_uptodate\"" + # always emit microcode_blacklisted when we have microcode info (it's a boolean, never omit) + [ -n "$ucode_hex" ] && cpu_labels="${cpu_labels:+$cpu_labels,}microcode_blacklisted=\"$ucode_blacklisted\"" + [ -n "$cpu_labels" ] && g_smc_cpu_info_line="smc_cpu_info{$cpu_labels} 1" } # Update global state used to determine the program exit code @@ -2423,7 +2830,8 @@ pvulnstatus() { case "$opt_batch_format" in text) _emit_text "$1" "$aka" "$2" "$3" ;; short) _emit_short "$1" "$aka" "$2" "$3" ;; - json) _emit_json "$1" "$aka" "$2" "$3" ;; + json) _emit_json_full "$1" "$aka" "$2" "$3" ;; + json-terse) _emit_json_terse "$1" "$aka" "$2" "$3" ;; nrpe) _emit_nrpe "$1" "$aka" "$2" "$3" ;; prometheus) _emit_prometheus "$1" "$aka" "$2" "$3" ;; *) @@ -2431,6 +2839,9 @@ pvulnstatus() { exit 255 ;; esac + # reset per-CVE sysfs globals so they don't leak into the next CVE + g_json_cve_sysfs_status='' + g_json_cve_sysfs_msg='' fi _record_result "$1" "$2" @@ -2925,7 +3336,7 @@ write_msr_one_core() { core="$1" msr_dec=$(($2)) msr=$(printf "0x%x" "$msr_dec") - value_dec=$(($3)) + value_dec=$((${3:-0})) value=$(printf "0x%x" "$value_dec") ret_write_msr_msg='unknown error' @@ -3741,18 +4152,16 @@ read_mcedb() { # Read the Intel official affected CPUs database (builtin) to stdout read_inteldb() { - if [ "$opt_intel_db" = 1 ]; then - awk '/^# %%% ENDOFINTELDB/ { exit } { if (DELIM==1) { print $2 } } /^# %%% INTELDB/ { DELIM=1 }' "$0" - fi - # otherwise don't output nothing, it'll be as if the database is empty + awk '/^# %%% ENDOFINTELDB/ { exit } { if (DELIM==1) { print $2 } } /^# %%% INTELDB/ { DELIM=1 }' "$0" } # Check whether the CPU is running the latest known microcode version -# Sets: ret_is_latest_known_ucode_latest +# Sets: ret_is_latest_known_ucode_latest, ret_is_latest_known_ucode_version # Returns: 0=latest, 1=outdated, 2=unknown is_latest_known_ucode() { local brand_prefix tuple pfmask ucode ucode_date parse_cpu_details + ret_is_latest_known_ucode_version='' if [ "$cpu_cpuid" = 0 ]; then ret_is_latest_known_ucode_latest="couldn't get your cpuid" return 2 @@ -3779,6 +4188,8 @@ is_latest_known_ucode() { ucode_date=$(echo "$tuple" | cut -d, -f5 | sed -E 's=(....)(..)(..)=\1/\2/\3=') pr_debug "is_latest_known_ucode: with cpuid $cpu_cpuid has ucode $cpu_ucode, last known is $ucode from $ucode_date" ret_is_latest_known_ucode_latest=$(printf "latest version is 0x%x dated $ucode_date according to $g_mcedb_info" "$ucode") + # shellcheck disable=SC2034 + ret_is_latest_known_ucode_version=$(printf "0x%x" "$ucode") if [ "$cpu_ucode" -ge "$ucode" ]; then return 0 else @@ -3904,7 +4315,7 @@ if [ "$opt_cpu" != all ] && [ "$opt_cpu" -gt "$g_max_core_id" ]; then exit 255 fi -if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then +if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then pr_info "Checking for vulnerabilities on current system" # try to find the image of the current running kernel @@ -4066,7 +4477,7 @@ else fi if [ -n "$g_kernel_version" ]; then # in live mode, check if the img we found is the correct one - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then pr_verbose "Kernel image is \033[35m$g_kernel_version" if ! echo "$g_kernel_version" | grep -qF "$(uname -r)"; then pr_warn "Possible discrepancy between your running kernel '$(uname -r)' and the image '$g_kernel_version' we found ($opt_kernel), results might be incorrect" @@ -4098,7 +4509,7 @@ sys_interface_check() { msg='' ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg='' - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_no_sysfs" = 0 ] && [ -r "$file" ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_no_sysfs" = 0 ] && [ -r "$file" ]; then : else g_mockme=$(printf "%b\n%b" "$g_mockme" "SMC_MOCK_SYSFS_$(basename "$file")_RET=1") @@ -4127,9 +4538,14 @@ sys_interface_check() { g_mockme=$(printf "%b\n%b" "$g_mockme" "SMC_MOCK_SYSFS_$(basename "$file")='$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg'") fi if [ "$mode" = silent ]; then + # capture sysfs message for JSON even in silent mode + # shellcheck disable=SC2034 + g_json_cve_sysfs_msg="$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" return 0 elif [ "$mode" = quiet ]; then pr_info "* Information from the /sys interface: $ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" + # shellcheck disable=SC2034 + g_json_cve_sysfs_msg="$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" return 0 fi pr_info_nol "* Mitigated according to the /sys interface: " @@ -4149,6 +4565,11 @@ sys_interface_check() { ret_sys_interface_check_status=UNK pstatus yellow UNKNOWN "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" fi + # capture for JSON full output (read by _emit_json_full via pvulnstatus) + # shellcheck disable=SC2034 + g_json_cve_sysfs_status="$ret_sys_interface_check_status" + # shellcheck disable=SC2034 + g_json_cve_sysfs_msg="$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" pr_debug "sys_interface_check: $file=$msg (re=$regex)" return 0 } @@ -4157,7 +4578,7 @@ sys_interface_check() { check_kernel_info() { local config_display pr_info "\033[1;34mKernel information\033[0m" - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then pr_info "* Kernel is \033[35m$g_os $(uname -r) $(uname -v) $(uname -m)\033[0m" elif [ -n "$g_kernel_version" ]; then pr_info "* Kernel is \033[35m$g_kernel_version\033[0m" @@ -4261,7 +4682,7 @@ check_cpu() { ret=invalid pstatus yellow NO "unknown CPU" fi - if [ -z "$cap_ibrs" ] && [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ -z "$cap_ibrs" ] && [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # CPUID device unavailable (e.g. in a VM): fall back to /proc/cpuinfo if grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw ibrs; then cap_ibrs='IBRS (cpuinfo)' @@ -4338,7 +4759,7 @@ check_cpu() { if [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_OK ]; then cap_ibpb='IBPB_SUPPORT' pstatus green YES "IBPB_SUPPORT feature bit" - elif [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw ibpb; then + elif [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw ibpb; then # CPUID device unavailable (e.g. in a VM): fall back to /proc/cpuinfo cap_ibpb='IBPB (cpuinfo)' pstatus green YES "ibpb flag in $g_procfs/cpuinfo" @@ -4409,7 +4830,7 @@ check_cpu() { ret=invalid pstatus yellow UNKNOWN "unknown CPU" fi - if [ -z "$cap_stibp" ] && [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ -z "$cap_stibp" ] && [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # CPUID device unavailable (e.g. in a VM): fall back to /proc/cpuinfo if grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw stibp; then cap_stibp='STIBP (cpuinfo)' @@ -4481,7 +4902,7 @@ check_cpu() { fi fi - if [ -z "$cap_ssbd" ] && [ "$ret24" = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$ret25" = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ -z "$cap_ssbd" ] && [ "$ret24" = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$ret25" = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # CPUID device unavailable (e.g. in a VM): fall back to /proc/cpuinfo if grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw ssbd; then cap_ssbd='SSBD (cpuinfo)' @@ -4545,7 +4966,7 @@ check_cpu() { if [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_OK ]; then pstatus green YES "L1D flush feature bit" cap_l1df=1 - elif [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw flush_l1d; then + elif [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw flush_l1d; then # CPUID device unavailable (e.g. in a VM): fall back to /proc/cpuinfo pstatus green YES "flush_l1d flag in $g_procfs/cpuinfo" cap_l1df=1 @@ -4565,7 +4986,7 @@ check_cpu() { if [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_OK ]; then cap_md_clear=1 pstatus green YES "MD_CLEAR feature bit" - elif [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw md_clear; then + elif [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw md_clear; then # CPUID device unavailable (e.g. in a VM): fall back to /proc/cpuinfo cap_md_clear=1 pstatus green YES "md_clear flag in $g_procfs/cpuinfo" @@ -4635,7 +5056,7 @@ check_cpu() { if [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_OK ]; then pstatus green YES cap_arch_capabilities=1 - elif [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw arch_capabilities; then + elif [ $ret = $READ_CPUID_RET_ERR ] && [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw arch_capabilities; then # CPUID device unavailable (e.g. in a VM): fall back to /proc/cpuinfo pstatus green YES "arch_capabilities flag in $g_procfs/cpuinfo" cap_arch_capabilities=1 @@ -5339,7 +5760,7 @@ check_cve() { check_mds_bsd() { local kernel_md_clear kernel_smt_allowed kernel_mds_enabled kernel_mds_state pr_info_nol "* Kernel supports using MD_CLEAR mitigation: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if sysctl hw.mds_disable >/dev/null 2>&1; then pstatus green YES kernel_md_clear=1 @@ -5412,7 +5833,7 @@ check_mds_bsd() { else if [ "$cap_md_clear" = 1 ]; then if [ "$kernel_md_clear" = 1 ]; then - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # mitigation must also be enabled if [ "$kernel_mds_enabled" -ge 1 ]; then if [ "$opt_paranoid" != 1 ] || [ "$kernel_smt_allowed" = 0 ]; then @@ -5431,7 +5852,7 @@ check_mds_bsd() { pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Your microcode supports mitigation, but your kernel doesn't, upgrade it to mitigate the vulnerability" fi else - if [ "$kernel_md_clear" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$kernel_md_clear" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # no MD_CLEAR in microcode, but FreeBSD may still have software-only mitigation active case "$kernel_mds_state" in software*) @@ -5471,7 +5892,7 @@ check_mds_linux() { pr_info_nol "* Kernel supports using MD_CLEAR mitigation: " kernel_md_clear='' kernel_md_clear_can_tell=1 - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw md_clear; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && grep ^flags "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" | grep -qw md_clear; then kernel_md_clear="md_clear found in $g_procfs/cpuinfo" pstatus green YES "$kernel_md_clear" fi @@ -5494,7 +5915,7 @@ check_mds_linux() { fi fi - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && [ "$sys_interface_available" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && [ "$sys_interface_available" = 1 ]; then pr_info_nol "* Kernel mitigation is enabled and active: " if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -qi ^mitigation; then mds_mitigated=1 @@ -5526,7 +5947,7 @@ check_mds_linux() { # compute mystatus and mymsg from our own logic if [ "$cap_md_clear" = 1 ]; then if [ -n "$kernel_md_clear" ]; then - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # mitigation must also be enabled if [ "$mds_mitigated" = 1 ]; then if [ "$opt_paranoid" != 1 ] || [ "$mds_smt_mitigated" = 1 ]; then @@ -5745,7 +6166,7 @@ check_mmio_linux() { pstatus yellow NO fi - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && [ "$sys_interface_available" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && [ "$sys_interface_available" = 1 ]; then pr_info_nol "* Kernel mitigation is enabled and active: " if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -qi ^mitigation; then mmio_mitigated=1 @@ -5777,7 +6198,7 @@ check_mmio_linux() { # compute mystatus and mymsg from our own logic if [ "$cap_fb_clear" = 1 ]; then if [ -n "$kernel_mmio" ]; then - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # mitigation must also be enabled if [ "$mmio_mitigated" = 1 ]; then if [ "$opt_paranoid" != 1 ] || [ "$mmio_smt_mitigated" = 1 ]; then @@ -6096,9 +6517,6 @@ check_CVE_0000_0001_linux() { # --- verdict (x86_64) --- if [ "$_sls_config" = 1 ] || [ "$_sls_heuristic" = 1 ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "kernel compiled with SLS mitigation" - explain "Your kernel was compiled with CONFIG_MITIGATION_SLS=y (or CONFIG_SLS=y on kernels before 6.8),\n" \ - "which enables the GCC flag -mharden-sls=all to insert INT3 instructions after unconditional\n" \ - "control flow changes, blocking straight-line speculation." elif [ "$_sls_config" = 0 ] || [ "$_sls_heuristic" = 0 ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "kernel not compiled with SLS mitigation" explain "Recompile your kernel with CONFIG_MITIGATION_SLS=y (or CONFIG_SLS=y on kernels before 6.8).\n" \ @@ -6410,7 +6828,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { g_ibpb_supported='' g_ibpb_enabled='' - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # in live mode, we can check for the ibrs_enabled file in debugfs # all versions of the patches have it (NOT the case of IBPB or KPTI) g_ibrs_can_tell=1 @@ -6561,7 +6979,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { fi pr_info_nol " * IBRS enabled and active: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ "$g_ibpb_enabled" = 2 ]; then # if ibpb=2, ibrs is forcefully=0 pstatus blue NO "IBPB used instead of IBRS in all kernel entrypoints" @@ -6592,7 +7010,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { esac fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi pr_info_nol " * Kernel is compiled with IBPB support: " @@ -6600,8 +7018,8 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { if [ "$g_ibpb_can_tell" = 1 ]; then pstatus yellow NO else - # if we're in offline mode without System.map, we can't really know - pstatus yellow UNKNOWN "in offline mode, we need the kernel image to be able to tell" + # if we're in no-runtime mode without System.map, we can't really know + pstatus yellow UNKNOWN "in no-runtime mode, we need the kernel image to be able to tell" fi else if [ "$opt_verbose" -ge 2 ]; then @@ -6612,7 +7030,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { fi pr_info_nol " * IBPB enabled and active: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then case "$g_ibpb_enabled" in "") if [ "$g_ibrs_supported" = 1 ]; then @@ -6629,7 +7047,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { *) pstatus yellow UNKNOWN ;; esac else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi pr_info "* Mitigation 2" @@ -6689,7 +7107,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { # # since 5.15.28, this is now "Retpolines" as the implementation was switched to a generic one, # so we look for both "retpoline" and "retpolines" - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && [ -n "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && [ -n "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" ]; then if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -qwi -e retpoline -e retpolines; then if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -qwi minimal; then retpoline_compiler=0 @@ -6740,7 +7158,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { # only Red Hat has a tunable to disable it on runtime retp_enabled=-1 - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ -e "$g_specex_knob_dir/retp_enabled" ]; then retp_enabled=$(cat "$g_specex_knob_dir/retp_enabled" 2>/dev/null) pr_debug "retpoline: found $g_specex_knob_dir/retp_enabled=$retp_enabled" @@ -6770,7 +7188,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { if is_vulnerable_to_empty_rsb || [ "$opt_verbose" -ge 2 ]; then pr_info_nol " * Kernel supports RSB filling: " rsb_filling=0 - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_no_sysfs" != 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_no_sysfs" != 1 ]; then # if we're live and we aren't denied looking into /sys, let's do it if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -qw RSB; then rsb_filling=1 @@ -6863,7 +7281,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { *", IBPB"* | *"; IBPB"*) v2_ibpb_mode=conditional ;; *) v2_ibpb_mode=disabled ;; esac - elif [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + elif [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then case "$g_ibpb_enabled" in 2) v2_ibpb_mode=always-on ;; 1) v2_ibpb_mode=conditional ;; @@ -6961,7 +7379,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { *"PBRSB-eIBRS: Vulnerable"*) v2_pbrsb_status=vulnerable ;; *) v2_pbrsb_status=unknown ;; esac - elif [ "$opt_live" != 1 ] && [ -n "$g_kernel" ]; then + elif [ "$opt_runtime" != 1 ] && [ -n "$g_kernel" ]; then if grep -q 'PBRSB-eIBRS' "$g_kernel" 2>/dev/null; then v2_pbrsb_status=sw-sequence else @@ -6992,7 +7410,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { *"BHI: Vulnerable"*) v2_bhi_status=vulnerable ;; *) v2_bhi_status=unknown ;; esac - elif [ "$opt_live" != 1 ] && [ -n "$opt_config" ] && [ -r "$opt_config" ]; then + elif [ "$opt_runtime" != 1 ] && [ -n "$opt_config" ] && [ -r "$opt_config" ]; then if grep -q '^CONFIG_\(MITIGATION_\)\?SPECTRE_BHI' "$opt_config"; then if [ "$cap_bhi" = 1 ]; then v2_bhi_status=bhi_dis_s @@ -7016,7 +7434,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { esac # --- v2_vuln_module --- - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && [ -n "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && [ -n "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" ]; then pr_info_nol " * Non-retpoline module loaded: " if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -q 'vulnerable module loaded'; then v2_vuln_module=1 @@ -7115,7 +7533,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { if [ -n "${SMC_MOCK_UNPRIVILEGED_BPF_DISABLED:-}" ]; then _ebpf_disabled="$SMC_MOCK_UNPRIVILEGED_BPF_DISABLED" g_mocked=1 - elif [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && [ -r "$g_procfs/sys/kernel/unprivileged_bpf_disabled" ]; then + elif [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && [ -r "$g_procfs/sys/kernel/unprivileged_bpf_disabled" ]; then _ebpf_disabled=$(cat "$g_procfs/sys/kernel/unprivileged_bpf_disabled" 2>/dev/null) g_mockme=$(printf "%b\n%b" "$g_mockme" "SMC_MOCK_UNPRIVILEGED_BPF_DISABLED='$_ebpf_disabled'") fi @@ -7303,18 +7721,18 @@ check_CVE_2017_5715_linux() { pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "Full IBPB is mitigating the vulnerability" # Offline mode fallback - elif [ "$opt_live" != 1 ]; then + elif [ "$opt_runtime" != 1 ]; then if [ "$retpoline" = 1 ] && [ -n "$g_ibpb_supported" ]; then - pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "offline mode: kernel supports retpoline + IBPB to mitigate the vulnerability" + pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "no-runtime mode: kernel supports retpoline + IBPB to mitigate the vulnerability" elif [ -n "$g_ibrs_supported" ] && [ -n "$g_ibpb_supported" ]; then - pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "offline mode: kernel supports IBRS + IBPB to mitigate the vulnerability" + pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "no-runtime mode: kernel supports IBRS + IBPB to mitigate the vulnerability" elif [ "$cap_ibrs_all" = 1 ] || [ "$cap_autoibrs" = 1 ]; then - pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "offline mode: CPU supports Enhanced / Automatic IBRS" + pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "no-runtime mode: CPU supports Enhanced / Automatic IBRS" # CONFIG_MITIGATION_SPECTRE_V2 (v6.12+): top-level on/off for all Spectre V2 mitigations elif [ -n "$opt_config" ] && [ -r "$opt_config" ] && grep -q '^CONFIG_MITIGATION_SPECTRE_V2=y' "$opt_config"; then - pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "offline mode: kernel has Spectre V2 mitigation framework enabled (CONFIG_MITIGATION_SPECTRE_V2)" + pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "no-runtime mode: kernel has Spectre V2 mitigation framework enabled (CONFIG_MITIGATION_SPECTRE_V2)" elif [ "$g_ibrs_can_tell" != 1 ]; then - pvulnstatus "$cve" UNK "offline mode: not enough information" + pvulnstatus "$cve" UNK "no-runtime mode: not enough information" explain "Re-run this script with root privileges, and give it the kernel image (--kernel), the kernel configuration (--config) and the System.map file (--map) corresponding to the kernel you would like to inspect." fi fi @@ -7462,7 +7880,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5753_linux() { status=$ret_sys_interface_check_status fi if [ "$opt_sysfs_only" != 1 ]; then - # no /sys interface (or offline mode), fallback to our own ways + # no /sys interface (or no-runtime mode), fallback to our own ways # Primary detection: grep for sysfs mitigation strings in the kernel binary. # The string "__user pointer sanitization" is present in all kernel versions @@ -7798,7 +8216,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5754_linux() { mount_debugfs pr_info_nol " * PTI enabled and active: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then dmesg_grep="Kernel/User page tables isolation: enabled" dmesg_grep="$dmesg_grep|Kernel page table isolation enabled" dmesg_grep="$dmesg_grep|x86/pti: Unmapping kernel while in userspace" @@ -7844,7 +8262,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5754_linux() { pstatus yellow NO fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi pti_performance_check @@ -7861,7 +8279,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5754_linux() { is_xen_dom0 && xen_pv_domo=1 is_xen_domU && xen_pv_domu=1 - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # checking whether we're running under Xen PV 64 bits. If yes, we are affected by affected_variant3 # (unless we are a Dom0) pr_info_nol "* Running as a Xen PV DomU: " @@ -7877,7 +8295,7 @@ check_CVE_2017_5754_linux() { pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your CPU vendor reported your CPU model as not affected" elif [ -z "$msg" ]; then # if msg is empty, sysfs check didn't fill it, rely on our own test - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ "$kpti_enabled" = 1 ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "PTI mitigates the vulnerability" elif [ "$xen_pv_domo" = 1 ]; then @@ -7903,12 +8321,12 @@ check_CVE_2017_5754_linux() { fi else if [ -n "$kpti_support" ]; then - pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "offline mode: PTI will mitigate the vulnerability if enabled at runtime" + pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "no-runtime mode: PTI will mitigate the vulnerability if enabled at runtime" elif [ "$kpti_can_tell" = 1 ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "PTI is needed to mitigate the vulnerability" explain "If you're using a distro kernel, upgrade your distro to get the latest kernel available. Otherwise, recompile the kernel with the CONFIG_(MITIGATION_)PAGE_TABLE_ISOLATION option (named CONFIG_KAISER for some kernels), or the CONFIG_UNMAP_KERNEL_AT_EL0 option (for ARM64)" else - pvulnstatus "$cve" UNK "offline mode: not enough information" + pvulnstatus "$cve" UNK "no-runtime mode: not enough information" explain "Re-run this script with root privileges, and give it the kernel image (--kernel), the kernel configuration (--config) and the System.map file (--map) corresponding to the kernel you would like to inspect." fi fi @@ -8041,7 +8459,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_12207_linux() { fi pr_info_nol "* iTLB Multihit mitigation enabled and active: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ -n "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" ]; then if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -qF 'Mitigation'; then pstatus green YES "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" @@ -8052,7 +8470,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_12207_linux() { pstatus yellow NO "itlb_multihit not found in sysfs hierarchy" fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi elif [ "$sys_interface_available" = 0 ]; then # we have no sysfs but were asked to use it only! @@ -8068,7 +8486,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_12207_linux() { elif [ -z "$msg" ]; then # if msg is empty, sysfs check didn't fill it, rely on our own test if [ "$opt_sysfs_only" != 1 ]; then - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # if we're in live mode and $msg is empty, sysfs file is not there so kernel is too old pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Your kernel doesn't support iTLB Multihit mitigation, update it" else @@ -8192,7 +8610,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_3620_linux() { fi pr_info_nol "* PTE inversion enabled and active: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ -n "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" ]; then if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -q 'Mitigation: PTE Inversion'; then pstatus green YES @@ -8206,7 +8624,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_3620_linux() { pteinv_active=-1 fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi elif [ "$sys_interface_available" = 0 ]; then # we have no sysfs but were asked to use it only! @@ -8221,7 +8639,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_3620_linux() { # if msg is empty, sysfs check didn't fill it, rely on our own test if [ "$opt_sysfs_only" != 1 ]; then if [ "$pteinv_supported" = 1 ]; then - if [ "$pteinv_active" = 1 ] || [ "$opt_live" != 1 ]; then + if [ "$pteinv_active" = 1 ] || [ "$opt_runtime" != 1 ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "PTE inversion mitigates the vulnerability" else pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Your kernel supports PTE inversion but it doesn't seem to be enabled" @@ -8293,7 +8711,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_3639_linux() { fi if [ "$opt_sysfs_only" != 1 ]; then pr_info_nol "* Kernel supports disabling speculative store bypass (SSB): " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if grep -Eq 'Speculation.?Store.?Bypass:' "$g_procfs/self/status" 2>/dev/null; then kernel_ssb="found in $g_procfs/self/status" pr_debug "found Speculation.Store.Bypass: in $g_procfs/self/status" @@ -8332,7 +8750,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_3639_linux() { fi kernel_ssbd_enabled=-1 - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v5.0/source/fs/proc/array.c#L340 pr_info_nol "* SSB mitigation is enabled and active: " if grep -Eq 'Speculation.?Store.?Bypass:[[:space:]]+thread' "$g_procfs/self/status" 2>/dev/null; then @@ -8381,7 +8799,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_3639_linux() { # if msg is empty, sysfs check didn't fill it, rely on our own test if [ -n "$cap_ssbd" ]; then if [ -n "$kernel_ssb" ]; then - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ "$kernel_ssbd_enabled" -gt 0 ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your CPU and kernel both support SSBD and mitigation is enabled" else @@ -8396,11 +8814,21 @@ check_CVE_2018_3639_linux() { fi else if [ -n "$kernel_ssb" ]; then - pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Your CPU doesn't support SSBD" - explain "Your kernel is recent enough to use the CPU microcode features for mitigation, but your CPU microcode doesn't actually provide the necessary features for the kernel to use. The microcode of your CPU hence needs to be upgraded. This is usually done at boot time by your kernel (the upgrade is not persistent across reboots which is why it's done at each boot). If you're using a distro, make sure you are up to date, as microcode updates are usually shipped alongside with the distro kernel. Availability of a microcode update for you CPU model depends on your CPU vendor. You can usually find out online if a microcode update is available for your CPU by searching for your CPUID (indicated in the Hardware Check section)." + if [ "$cpu_vendor" = ARM ] || [ "$cpu_vendor" = CAVIUM ] || [ "$cpu_vendor" = PHYTIUM ]; then + pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "no SSB mitigation is active on your system" + explain "ARM CPUs mitigate SSB either through a hardware SSBS bit (ARMv8.5+ CPUs) or through firmware support for SMCCC ARCH_WORKAROUND_2. Your kernel reports SSB status but neither mechanism appears to be active. For CPUs predating ARMv8.5 (such as Cortex-A57 or Cortex-A72), check with your board or SoC vendor for a firmware update that provides SMCCC ARCH_WORKAROUND_2 support." + else + pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Your CPU doesn't support SSBD" + explain "Your kernel is recent enough to use the CPU microcode features for mitigation, but your CPU microcode doesn't actually provide the necessary features for the kernel to use. The microcode of your CPU hence needs to be upgraded. This is usually done at boot time by your kernel (the upgrade is not persistent across reboots which is why it's done at each boot). If you're using a distro, make sure you are up to date, as microcode updates are usually shipped alongside with the distro kernel. Availability of a microcode update for you CPU model depends on your CPU vendor. You can usually find out online if a microcode update is available for your CPU by searching for your CPUID (indicated in the Hardware Check section)." + fi else - pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Neither your CPU nor your kernel support SSBD" - explain "Both your CPU microcode and your kernel are lacking support for mitigation. If you're using a distro kernel, upgrade your distro to get the latest kernel available. Otherwise, recompile the kernel from recent-enough sources. The microcode of your CPU also needs to be upgraded. This is usually done at boot time by your kernel (the upgrade is not persistent across reboots which is why it's done at each boot). If you're using a distro, make sure you are up to date, as microcode updates are usually shipped alongside with the distro kernel. Availability of a microcode update for you CPU model depends on your CPU vendor. You can usually find out online if a microcode update is available for your CPU by searching for your CPUID (indicated in the Hardware Check section)." + if [ "$cpu_vendor" = ARM ] || [ "$cpu_vendor" = CAVIUM ] || [ "$cpu_vendor" = PHYTIUM ]; then + pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "your kernel and firmware do not support SSB mitigation" + explain "ARM SSB mitigation requires kernel support (CONFIG_ARM64_SSBD) combined with either a hardware SSBS bit (ARMv8.5+ CPUs) or firmware support for SMCCC ARCH_WORKAROUND_2. Ensure you are running a recent kernel compiled with CONFIG_ARM64_SSBD. For CPUs predating ARMv8.5, also check with your board or SoC vendor for a firmware update providing SMCCC ARCH_WORKAROUND_2 support." + else + pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Neither your CPU nor your kernel support SSBD" + explain "Both your CPU microcode and your kernel are lacking support for mitigation. If you're using a distro kernel, upgrade your distro to get the latest kernel available. Otherwise, recompile the kernel from recent-enough sources. The microcode of your CPU also needs to be upgraded. This is usually done at boot time by your kernel (the upgrade is not persistent across reboots which is why it's done at each boot). If you're using a distro, make sure you are up to date, as microcode updates are usually shipped alongside with the distro kernel. Availability of a microcode update for you CPU model depends on your CPU vendor. You can usually find out online if a microcode update is available for your CPU by searching for your CPUID (indicated in the Hardware Check section)." + fi fi fi else @@ -8466,7 +8894,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_3639_bsd() { # CVE-2018-3640, Variant 3a, Rogue System Register Read check_CVE_2018_3640() { - local status sys_interface_available msg cve + local status sys_interface_available msg cve is_arm64_kernel arm_v3a_mitigation cve='CVE-2018-3640' pr_info "\033[1;34m$cve aka '$(cve2name "$cve")'\033[0m" @@ -8474,23 +8902,67 @@ check_CVE_2018_3640() { sys_interface_available=0 msg='' - pr_info_nol "* CPU microcode mitigates the vulnerability: " - if [ -n "$cap_ssbd" ]; then - # microcodes that ship with SSBD are known to also fix affected_variant3a - # there is no specific cpuid bit as far as we know - pstatus green YES - else - pstatus yellow NO + # Detect whether the target kernel is ARM64, for both live and no-runtime modes. + # In offline cross-inspection (x86 host, ARM kernel), cpu_vendor reflects the host, + # so also check for arm64_sys_ symbols (same pattern used in CVE-2018-3639). + is_arm64_kernel=0 + if [ "$cpu_vendor" = ARM ] || [ "$cpu_vendor" = CAVIUM ] || [ "$cpu_vendor" = PHYTIUM ]; then + is_arm64_kernel=1 + elif [ -n "$opt_map" ] && grep -q 'arm64_sys_' "$opt_map" 2>/dev/null; then + is_arm64_kernel=1 + elif [ -n "$g_kernel" ] && grep -q 'arm64_sys_' "$g_kernel" 2>/dev/null; then + is_arm64_kernel=1 + elif [ -n "$opt_config" ] && grep -qw 'CONFIG_ARM64=y' "$opt_config" 2>/dev/null; then + is_arm64_kernel=1 fi - if ! is_cpu_affected "$cve"; then - # override status & msg in case CPU is not vulnerable after all - pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your CPU vendor reported your CPU model as not affected" - elif [ -n "$cap_ssbd" ]; then - pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your CPU microcode mitigates the vulnerability" + if [ "$is_arm64_kernel" = 1 ]; then + # ARM64: mitigation is via an EL2 indirect trampoline (spectre_v3a_enable_mitigation), + # applied automatically at boot for affected CPUs (Cortex-A57, Cortex-A72). + # No microcode update is involved. + arm_v3a_mitigation='' + if [ -n "$opt_map" ] && grep -qw spectre_v3a_enable_mitigation "$opt_map" 2>/dev/null; then + arm_v3a_mitigation="found spectre_v3a_enable_mitigation in System.map" + fi + if [ -z "$arm_v3a_mitigation" ] && [ -n "$g_kernel" ]; then + if "${opt_arch_prefix}strings" "$g_kernel" 2>/dev/null | grep -qw spectre_v3a_enable_mitigation; then + arm_v3a_mitigation="found spectre_v3a_enable_mitigation in kernel image" + fi + fi + + pr_info_nol "* Kernel mitigates the vulnerability via EL2 hardening: " + if [ -n "$arm_v3a_mitigation" ]; then + pstatus green YES "$arm_v3a_mitigation" + else + pstatus yellow NO + fi + + if ! is_cpu_affected "$cve"; then + pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your CPU vendor reported your CPU model as not affected" + elif [ -n "$arm_v3a_mitigation" ]; then + pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your kernel mitigates the vulnerability via EL2 vector hardening" + else + pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "your kernel does not include the EL2 vector hardening mitigation" + explain "ARM64 Spectre v3a mitigation is provided by the kernel using an indirect trampoline for EL2 (hypervisor) vectors (spectre_v3a_enable_mitigation). Ensure you are running a recent kernel. If you're using a distro kernel, upgrading your distro should provide a kernel with this mitigation included." + fi else - pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "an up-to-date CPU microcode is needed to mitigate this vulnerability" - explain "The microcode of your CPU needs to be upgraded to mitigate this vulnerability. This is usually done at boot time by your kernel (the upgrade is not persistent across reboots which is why it's done at each boot). If you're using a distro, make sure you are up to date, as microcode updates are usually shipped alongside with the distro kernel. Availability of a microcode update for you CPU model depends on your CPU vendor. You can usually find out online if a microcode update is available for your CPU by searching for your CPUID (indicated in the Hardware Check section). The microcode update is enough, there is no additional OS, kernel or software change needed." + # x86: microcodes that ship with SSBD are known to also fix variant 3a; + # there is no specific CPUID bit for variant 3a as far as we know. + pr_info_nol "* CPU microcode mitigates the vulnerability: " + if [ -n "$cap_ssbd" ]; then + pstatus green YES + else + pstatus yellow NO + fi + + if ! is_cpu_affected "$cve"; then + pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your CPU vendor reported your CPU model as not affected" + elif [ -n "$cap_ssbd" ]; then + pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your CPU microcode mitigates the vulnerability" + else + pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "an up-to-date CPU microcode is needed to mitigate this vulnerability" + explain "The microcode of your CPU needs to be upgraded to mitigate this vulnerability. This is usually done at boot time by your kernel (the upgrade is not persistent across reboots which is why it's done at each boot). If you're using a distro, make sure you are up to date, as microcode updates are usually shipped alongside with the distro kernel. Availability of a microcode update for you CPU model depends on your CPU vendor. You can usually find out online if a microcode update is available for your CPU by searching for your CPUID (indicated in the Hardware Check section). The microcode update is enough, there is no additional OS, kernel or software change needed." + fi fi } @@ -8567,7 +9039,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_3646_linux() { pr_info "* Mitigation 1 (KVM)" pr_info_nol " * EPT is disabled: " ept_disabled=-1 - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if ! [ -r "$SYS_MODULE_BASE/kvm_intel/parameters/ept" ]; then pstatus blue N/A "the kvm_intel module is not loaded" elif [ "$(cat "$SYS_MODULE_BASE/kvm_intel/parameters/ept")" = N ]; then @@ -8577,12 +9049,12 @@ check_CVE_2018_3646_linux() { pstatus yellow NO fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi pr_info "* Mitigation 2" pr_info_nol " * L1D flush is supported by kernel: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && grep -qw flush_l1d "$g_procfs/cpuinfo"; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && grep -qw flush_l1d "$g_procfs/cpuinfo"; then l1d_kernel="found flush_l1d in $g_procfs/cpuinfo" fi if [ -z "$l1d_kernel" ]; then @@ -8604,7 +9076,7 @@ check_CVE_2018_3646_linux() { fi pr_info_nol " * L1D flush enabled: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ -n "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" ]; then # vanilla: VMX: $l1dstatus, SMT $smtstatus # Red Hat: VMX: SMT $smtstatus, L1D $l1dstatus @@ -8650,18 +9122,18 @@ check_CVE_2018_3646_linux() { fi else l1d_mode=-1 - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi pr_info_nol " * Hardware-backed L1D flush supported: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if grep -qw flush_l1d "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" || [ -n "$l1d_xen_hardware" ]; then pstatus green YES "performance impact of the mitigation will be greatly reduced" else pstatus blue NO "flush will be done in software, this is slower" fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi pr_info_nol " * Hyper-Threading (SMT) is enabled: " @@ -8813,7 +9285,7 @@ check_CVE_2019_11135_linux() { fi pr_info_nol "* TAA mitigation enabled and active: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ -n "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" ]; then if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -qE '^Mitigation'; then pstatus green YES "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" @@ -8824,7 +9296,7 @@ check_CVE_2019_11135_linux() { pstatus yellow NO "tsx_async_abort not found in sysfs hierarchy" fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi elif [ "$sys_interface_available" = 0 ]; then # we have no sysfs but were asked to use it only! @@ -8837,7 +9309,7 @@ check_CVE_2019_11135_linux() { pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your CPU vendor reported your CPU model as not affected" elif [ -z "$msg" ]; then # if msg is empty, sysfs check didn't fill it, rely on our own test - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # if we're in live mode and $msg is empty, sysfs file is not there so kernel is too old pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Your kernel doesn't support TAA mitigation, update it" else @@ -8967,7 +9439,7 @@ check_CVE_2020_0543_linux() { pstatus yellow NO fi pr_info_nol "* SRBDS mitigation control is enabled and active: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ -n "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" ]; then if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -qE '^Mitigation'; then pstatus green YES "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" @@ -8978,7 +9450,7 @@ check_CVE_2020_0543_linux() { pstatus yellow NO "SRBDS not found in sysfs hierarchy" fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi elif [ "$sys_interface_available" = 0 ]; then # we have no sysfs but were asked to use it only! @@ -8996,7 +9468,7 @@ check_CVE_2020_0543_linux() { # SRBDS mitigation control is enabled if [ -z "$msg" ]; then # if msg is empty, sysfs check didn't fill it, rely on our own test - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # if we're in live mode and $msg is empty, sysfs file is not there so kernel is too old pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "Your microcode is up to date for SRBDS mitigation control. The kernel needs to be updated" fi @@ -9010,7 +9482,7 @@ check_CVE_2020_0543_linux() { elif [ "$cap_srbds_on" = 0 ]; then # SRBDS mitigation control is disabled if [ -z "$msg" ]; then - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # if we're in live mode and $msg is empty, sysfs file is not there so kernel is too old pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Your microcode is up to date for SRBDS mitigation control. The kernel needs to be updated. Mitigation is disabled" fi @@ -9287,14 +9759,14 @@ check_CVE_2022_29900_linux() { # Zen/Zen+/Zen2: check IBPB microcode support and SMT if [ "$cpu_family" = $((0x17)) ]; then pr_info_nol "* CPU supports IBPB: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ -n "$cap_ibpb" ]; then pstatus green YES "$cap_ibpb" else pstatus yellow NO fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi pr_info_nol "* Hyper-Threading (SMT) is enabled: " @@ -9330,7 +9802,7 @@ check_CVE_2022_29900_linux() { "doesn't fully protect cross-thread speculation." elif [ -z "$kernel_unret" ] && [ -z "$kernel_ibpb_entry" ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "Your kernel doesn't have either UNRET_ENTRY or IBPB_ENTRY compiled-in" - elif [ "$smt_enabled" = 0 ] && [ -z "$cap_ibpb" ] && [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + elif [ "$smt_enabled" = 0 ] && [ -z "$cap_ibpb" ] && [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" VULN "SMT is enabled and your microcode doesn't support IBPB" explain "Update your CPU microcode to get IBPB support, or disable SMT by adding\n" \ "\`nosmt\` to your kernel command line." @@ -9454,7 +9926,7 @@ check_CVE_2022_29901_linux() { fi pr_info_nol "* CPU supports Enhanced IBRS (IBRS_ALL): " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] || [ "$cap_ibrs_all" != -1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] || [ "$cap_ibrs_all" != -1 ]; then if [ "$cap_ibrs_all" = 1 ]; then pstatus green YES elif [ "$cap_ibrs_all" = 0 ]; then @@ -9463,11 +9935,11 @@ check_CVE_2022_29901_linux() { pstatus yellow UNKNOWN fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi pr_info_nol "* CPU has RSB Alternate Behavior (RSBA): " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] || [ "$cap_rsba" != -1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] || [ "$cap_rsba" != -1 ]; then if [ "$cap_rsba" = 1 ]; then pstatus yellow YES "this CPU is affected by RSB underflow" elif [ "$cap_rsba" = 0 ]; then @@ -9476,7 +9948,7 @@ check_CVE_2022_29901_linux() { pstatus yellow UNKNOWN fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi elif [ "$sys_interface_available" = 0 ]; then @@ -9675,7 +10147,7 @@ check_CVE_2022_40982_linux() { if [ -n "$kernel_gds" ]; then pr_info_nol "* Kernel has disabled AVX as a mitigation: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # Check dmesg message to see whether AVX has been disabled dmesg_grep 'Microcode update needed! Disabling AVX as mitigation' dmesgret=$? @@ -9702,7 +10174,7 @@ check_CVE_2022_40982_linux() { pstatus yellow NO "AVX support is enabled" fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi fi @@ -10109,7 +10581,7 @@ check_CVE_2023_20588_linux() { pr_info_nol "* DIV0 mitigation enabled and active: " cpuinfo_div0='' dmesg_div0='' - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ -e "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" ] && grep -qw 'div0' "$g_procfs/cpuinfo" 2>/dev/null; then cpuinfo_div0=1 pstatus green YES "div0 found in $g_procfs/cpuinfo bug flags" @@ -10127,11 +10599,19 @@ check_CVE_2023_20588_linux() { fi fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi - pr_info_nol "* SMT (Simultaneous Multi-Threading) status: " + pr_info_nol "* SMT (Simultaneous Multi-Threading) is enabled: " is_cpu_smt_enabled + smt_ret=$? + if [ "$smt_ret" = 0 ]; then + pstatus yellow YES + elif [ "$smt_ret" = 2 ]; then + pstatus yellow UNKNOWN + else + pstatus green NO + fi elif [ "$sys_interface_available" = 0 ]; then msg="/sys vulnerability interface use forced, but it's not available!" status=UNK @@ -10141,7 +10621,7 @@ check_CVE_2023_20588_linux() { pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "your CPU vendor reported your CPU model as not affected" elif [ -z "$msg" ]; then if [ "$opt_sysfs_only" != 1 ]; then - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # live mode: cpuinfo div0 flag is the strongest proof the mitigation is active if [ "$cpuinfo_div0" = 1 ] || [ "$dmesg_div0" = 1 ]; then _cve_2023_20588_pvulnstatus_smt @@ -10153,7 +10633,7 @@ check_CVE_2023_20588_linux() { _cve_2023_20588_pvulnstatus_no_kernel fi else - # offline mode: only kernel image / System.map evidence is available + # no-runtime mode: only kernel image / System.map evidence is available if [ -n "$kernel_mitigated" ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "Mitigation: amd_clear_divider found in kernel image" else @@ -10208,7 +10688,7 @@ check_CVE_2023_20593_linux() { pstatus yellow NO fi pr_info_nol "* Zenbleed kernel mitigation enabled and active: " - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then # read the DE_CFG MSR, we want to check the 9th bit # don't do it on non-Zen2 AMD CPUs or later, aka Family 17h, # as the behavior could be unknown on others @@ -10233,7 +10713,7 @@ check_CVE_2023_20593_linux() { pstatus blue N/A "CPU is incompatible" fi else - pstatus blue N/A "not testable in offline mode" + pstatus blue N/A "not testable in no-runtime mode" fi pr_info_nol "* Zenbleed mitigation is supported by CPU microcode: " @@ -10262,7 +10742,7 @@ check_CVE_2023_20593_linux() { elif [ -z "$msg" ]; then # if msg is empty, sysfs check didn't fill it, rely on our own test zenbleed_print_vuln=0 - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ "$fp_backup_fix" = 1 ] && [ "$ucode_zenbleed" = 1 ]; then # this should never happen, but if it does, it's interesting to know pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "Both your CPU microcode and kernel are mitigating Zenbleed" @@ -10509,7 +10989,7 @@ check_CVE_2023_28746_linux() { pstatus yellow NO fi - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ] && [ "$sys_interface_available" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ] && [ "$sys_interface_available" = 1 ]; then pr_info_nol "* RFDS mitigation is enabled and active: " if echo "$ret_sys_interface_check_fullmsg" | grep -qi '^Mitigation'; then rfds_mitigated=1 @@ -10532,7 +11012,7 @@ check_CVE_2023_28746_linux() { if [ "$opt_sysfs_only" != 1 ]; then if [ "$cap_rfds_clear" = 1 ]; then if [ -n "$kernel_rfds" ]; then - if [ "$opt_live" = 1 ]; then + if [ "$opt_runtime" = 1 ]; then if [ "$rfds_mitigated" = 1 ]; then pvulnstatus "$cve" OK "Your microcode and kernel are both up to date for this mitigation, and mitigation is enabled" else @@ -11306,6 +11786,12 @@ check_CVE_2025_40300_bsd() { # vim: set ts=4 sw=4 sts=4 et: check_kernel_info + +# Build JSON meta and system sections early (after kernel info is resolved) +if [ "$opt_batch" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_batch_format" = "json" ]; then + _build_json_meta +fi + pr_info if [ "$opt_no_hw" = 0 ] && [ -z "$opt_arch_prefix" ]; then @@ -11315,6 +11801,23 @@ if [ "$opt_no_hw" = 0 ] && [ -z "$opt_arch_prefix" ]; then pr_info fi +# Build JSON system/cpu/microcode sections (after check_cpu has populated cap_* vars and VMM detection) +if [ "$opt_batch" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_batch_format" = "json" ]; then + _build_json_system + if [ "$opt_no_hw" = 0 ] && [ -z "$opt_arch_prefix" ]; then + _build_json_cpu + _build_json_cpu_microcode + fi +fi + +# Build Prometheus info metric lines (same timing requirement as JSON builders above) +if [ "$opt_batch" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_batch_format" = "prometheus" ]; then + _build_prometheus_system_info + if [ "$opt_no_hw" = 0 ] && [ -z "$opt_arch_prefix" ]; then + _build_prometheus_cpu_info + fi +fi + # now run the checks the user asked for for cve in $g_supported_cve_list; do if [ "$opt_cve_all" = 1 ] || echo "$opt_cve_list" | grep -qw "$cve"; then @@ -11374,25 +11877,127 @@ if [ "$g_mocked" = 1 ]; then fi if [ "$opt_batch" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_batch_format" = "nrpe" ]; then - if [ -n "$g_nrpe_vuln" ]; then - echo "Vulnerable:$g_nrpe_vuln" + _nrpe_is_root=0 + [ "$(id -u)" -eq 0 ] && _nrpe_is_root=1 + + # Non-root + VULN: demote to UNKNOWN — MSR reads were skipped so VULN findings + # may be false positives or genuine mitigations may have gone undetected + _nrpe_demoted=0 + [ "$g_nrpe_vuln_count" -gt 0 ] && [ "$_nrpe_is_root" = 0 ] && _nrpe_demoted=1 + + # Determine status word and build the one-line summary + if [ "$_nrpe_demoted" = 1 ]; then + _nrpe_status_word='UNKNOWN' + _nrpe_summary="${g_nrpe_vuln_count}/${g_nrpe_total} CVE(s) appear vulnerable (unconfirmed, not root): ${g_nrpe_vuln_ids}" + [ "$g_nrpe_unk_count" -gt 0 ] && _nrpe_summary="${_nrpe_summary}, ${g_nrpe_unk_count} inconclusive" + elif [ "$g_nrpe_vuln_count" -gt 0 ]; then + _nrpe_status_word='CRITICAL' + _nrpe_summary="${g_nrpe_vuln_count}/${g_nrpe_total} CVE(s) vulnerable: ${g_nrpe_vuln_ids}" + [ "$g_nrpe_unk_count" -gt 0 ] && _nrpe_summary="${_nrpe_summary}, ${g_nrpe_unk_count} inconclusive" + elif [ "$g_nrpe_unk_count" -gt 0 ]; then + _nrpe_status_word='UNKNOWN' + _nrpe_summary="${g_nrpe_unk_count}/${g_nrpe_total} CVE checks inconclusive" else - echo "OK" + _nrpe_status_word='OK' + _nrpe_summary="All ${g_nrpe_total} CVE checks passed" fi + + # Line 1: status word + summary + performance data (Nagios plugin spec) + echo "${_nrpe_status_word}: ${_nrpe_summary} | checked=${g_nrpe_total} vulnerable=${g_nrpe_vuln_count} unknown=${g_nrpe_unk_count}" + + # Long output (lines 2+): context notes, then per-CVE details + [ "$opt_paranoid" = 1 ] && echo "NOTE: paranoid mode active — stricter mitigation requirements applied" + case "${g_has_vmm:-}" in + 1) echo "NOTE: hypervisor host detected (${g_has_vmm_reason:-VMM}); L1TF/MDS severity is elevated" ;; + 0) echo "NOTE: not a hypervisor host" ;; + esac + [ "$_nrpe_is_root" = 0 ] && echo "NOTE: not running as root; MSR reads skipped, results may be incomplete" + + # VULN details first, then UNK details (each group in CVE-registry order) + [ -n "${g_nrpe_vuln_details:-}" ] && printf "%b\n" "$g_nrpe_vuln_details" + [ -n "${g_nrpe_unk_details:-}" ] && printf "%b\n" "$g_nrpe_unk_details" + + # Exit with the correct Nagios code when we demoted VULN→UNKNOWN due to non-root + # (g_critical=1 would otherwise cause exit 2 below) + [ "$_nrpe_demoted" = 1 ] && exit 3 fi if [ "$opt_batch" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_batch_format" = "short" ]; then _pr_echo 0 "${g_short_output% }" fi -if [ "$opt_batch" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_batch_format" = "json" ]; then +if [ "$opt_batch" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_batch_format" = "json-terse" ]; then _pr_echo 0 "${g_json_output%?}]" fi +if [ "$opt_batch" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_batch_format" = "json" ]; then + # Assemble the comprehensive JSON output from pre-built sections + # Inject mocked flag into meta (g_mocked can be set at any point during the run) + g_json_meta="${g_json_meta%\}},\"mocked\":$(_json_bool "${g_mocked:-0}")}" + _json_final='{' + _json_final="${_json_final}\"meta\":${g_json_meta:-null}" + _json_final="${_json_final},\"system\":${g_json_system:-null}" + _json_final="${_json_final},\"cpu\":${g_json_cpu:-null}" + _json_final="${_json_final},\"cpu_microcode\":${g_json_cpu_microcode:-null}" + if [ -n "${g_json_vulns:-}" ]; then + _json_final="${_json_final},\"vulnerabilities\":[${g_json_vulns%,}]" + else + _json_final="${_json_final},\"vulnerabilities\":[]" + fi + _json_final="${_json_final}}" + _pr_echo 0 "$_json_final" +fi + if [ "$opt_batch" = 1 ] && [ "$opt_batch_format" = "prometheus" ]; then - echo "# TYPE specex_vuln_status untyped" - echo "# HELP specex_vuln_status Exposure of system to speculative execution vulnerabilities" - printf "%b\n" "$g_prometheus_output" + prom_run_as_root='false' + [ "$(id -u)" -eq 0 ] && prom_run_as_root='true' + if [ "$opt_no_hw" = 1 ]; then + prom_mode='no-hw' + elif [ "$opt_runtime" = 0 ]; then + prom_mode='no-runtime' + else + prom_mode='live' + fi + prom_paranoid='false' + [ "$opt_paranoid" = 1 ] && prom_paranoid='true' + prom_sysfs_only='false' + [ "$opt_sysfs_only" = 1 ] && prom_sysfs_only='true' + prom_reduced_accuracy='false' + [ "${g_bad_accuracy:-0}" = 1 ] && prom_reduced_accuracy='true' + prom_mocked='false' + [ "${g_mocked:-0}" = 1 ] && prom_mocked='true' + echo "# HELP smc_build_info spectre-meltdown-checker script metadata (always 1)" + echo "# TYPE smc_build_info gauge" + printf 'smc_build_info{version="%s",mode="%s",run_as_root="%s",paranoid="%s",sysfs_only="%s",reduced_accuracy="%s",mocked="%s"} 1\n' \ + "$(_prom_escape "$VERSION")" \ + "$prom_mode" \ + "$prom_run_as_root" \ + "$prom_paranoid" \ + "$prom_sysfs_only" \ + "$prom_reduced_accuracy" \ + "$prom_mocked" + if [ -n "${g_smc_system_info_line:-}" ]; then + echo "# HELP smc_system_info Operating system and kernel metadata (always 1)" + echo "# TYPE smc_system_info gauge" + echo "$g_smc_system_info_line" + fi + if [ -n "${g_smc_cpu_info_line:-}" ]; then + echo "# HELP smc_cpu_info CPU hardware and microcode metadata (always 1)" + echo "# TYPE smc_cpu_info gauge" + echo "$g_smc_cpu_info_line" + fi + echo "# HELP smc_vulnerability_status Vulnerability check result per CVE: 0=not_vulnerable, 1=vulnerable, 2=unknown" + echo "# TYPE smc_vulnerability_status gauge" + printf "%b\n" "$g_smc_vuln_output" + echo "# HELP smc_vulnerable_count Number of CVEs with vulnerable status" + echo "# TYPE smc_vulnerable_count gauge" + echo "smc_vulnerable_count $g_smc_vuln_count" + echo "# HELP smc_unknown_count Number of CVEs with unknown status" + echo "# TYPE smc_unknown_count gauge" + echo "smc_unknown_count $g_smc_unk_count" + echo "# HELP smc_last_scan_timestamp_seconds Unix timestamp when this scan completed" + echo "# TYPE smc_last_scan_timestamp_seconds gauge" + echo "smc_last_scan_timestamp_seconds $(date +%s 2>/dev/null || echo 0)" fi # exit with the proper exit code