PCI devices with RMRRs not deassigned correctly Certain PCI devices in a system might be assigned Reserved Memory Regions (specified via Reserved Memory Region Reporting, "RMRR"). These are typically used for platform tasks such as legacy USB emulation. If such a device is passed through to a guest, then on guest shutdown the device is not properly deassigned. The IOMMU configuration for these devices which are not properly deassigned ends up pointing to a freed data structure, including the IO Pagetables. Subsequent DMA or interrupts from the device will have unpredictable behaviour, ranging from IOMMU faults to memory corruption.
[
{
"events": [
{
"introduced": "4.13.0"
},
{
"last_affected": "4.15.1"
}
]
},
{
"events": [
{
"introduced": "0"
},
{
"last_affected": "33"
}
]
},
{
"events": [
{
"introduced": "0"
},
{
"last_affected": "34"
}
]
},
{
"events": [
{
"introduced": "0"
},
{
"last_affected": "35"
}
]
},
{
"events": [
{
"introduced": "0"
},
{
"last_affected": "9.0"
}
]
}
]
"https://storage.googleapis.com/cve-osv-conversion/osv-output/CVE-2021-28702.json"