A vulnerability was found in systemd-coredump. This flaw allows an attacker to force a SUID process to crash and replace it with a non-SUID binary to access the original's privileged process coredump, allowing the attacker to read sensitive data, such as /etc/shadow content, loaded by the original process. A SUID binary or process has a special type of permission, which allows the process to run with the file owner's permissions, regardless of the user executing the binary. This allows the process to access more restricted data than unprivileged users or processes would be able to. An attacker can leverage this flaw by forcing a SUID process to crash and force the Linux kernel to recycle the process PID before systemd-coredump can analyze the /proc/pid/auxv file. If the attacker wins the race condition, they gain access to the original's SUID process coredump file. They can read sensitive content loaded into memory by the original binary, affecting data confidentiality.
History

Thu, 05 Jun 2025 07:45:00 +0000

Type Values Removed Values Added
References

Thu, 05 Jun 2025 03:45:00 +0000

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References

Fri, 30 May 2025 21:45:00 +0000

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References
Metrics threat_severity

None

threat_severity

Moderate


Fri, 30 May 2025 14:15:00 +0000

Type Values Removed Values Added
Metrics ssvc

{'options': {'Automatable': 'no', 'Exploitation': 'poc', 'Technical Impact': 'partial'}, 'version': '2.0.3'}


Fri, 30 May 2025 13:30:00 +0000

Type Values Removed Values Added
Description A vulnerability was found in systemd-coredump. This flaw allows an attacker to force a SUID process to crash and replace it with a non-SUID binary to access the original's privileged process coredump, allowing the attacker to read sensitive data, such as /etc/shadow content, loaded by the original process. A SUID binary or process has a special type of permission, which allows the process to run with the file owner's permissions, regardless of the user executing the binary. This allows the process to access more restricted data than unprivileged users or processes would be able to. An attacker can leverage this flaw by forcing a SUID process to crash and force the Linux kernel to recycle the process PID before systemd-coredump can analyze the /proc/pid/auxv file. If the attacker wins the race condition, they gain access to the original's SUID process coredump file. They can read sensitive content loaded into memory by the original binary, affecting data confidentiality.
Title Systemd-coredump: race condition that allows a local attacker to crash a suid program and gain read access to the resulting core dump
First Time appeared Redhat
Redhat enterprise Linux
Redhat openshift
Weaknesses CWE-364
CPEs cpe:/a:redhat:openshift:4
cpe:/o:redhat:enterprise_linux:10
cpe:/o:redhat:enterprise_linux:7
cpe:/o:redhat:enterprise_linux:8
cpe:/o:redhat:enterprise_linux:9
Vendors & Products Redhat
Redhat enterprise Linux
Redhat openshift
References
Metrics cvssV3_1

{'score': 4.7, 'vector': 'CVSS:3.1/AV:L/AC:H/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:N/A:N'}


cve-icon MITRE

Status: PUBLISHED

Assigner: redhat

Published: 2025-05-30T13:13:26.049Z

Updated: 2025-06-20T16:53:52.387Z

Reserved: 2025-05-12T16:33:34.815Z

Link: CVE-2025-4598

cve-icon Vulnrichment

Updated: 2025-06-05T07:03:23.601Z

cve-icon NVD

Status : Awaiting Analysis

Published: 2025-05-30T14:15:23.557

Modified: 2025-06-05T07:15:23.047

Link: CVE-2025-4598

cve-icon Redhat

Severity : Moderate

Publid Date: 2025-05-29T00:00:00Z

Links: CVE-2025-4598 - Bugzilla