The KTLS receive path decrypted each record in place, assuming that the mbufs holding received data were anonymous and safe to modify. This assumption does not hold for data placed on a socket by sendfile(2), which can reference file-backed memory directly through non-anonymous M_EXTPG pages or EXT_SFBUF mbufs. When the sender transmits such data over a loopback connection without enabling KTLS on the transmit side, the file-backed mbufs reach the receiver's decryption path unchanged. Decrypting a record in place then overwrites the backing file's page cache instead of a private copy of the data.
An unprivileged local user who can read a file can overwrite its contents with data of their choosing by sending the file over a loopback connection on which they have enabled KTLS receive. The write modifies the page cache directly, so it bypasses file flags such as schg and is written back to disk. By overwriting a setuid binary or other trusted file, a local user can escalate privileges, potentially gaining full control of the affected system.
An unprivileged local user who can read a file can overwrite its contents with data of their choosing by sending the file over a loopback connection on which they have enabled KTLS receive. The write modifies the page cache directly, so it bypasses file flags such as schg and is written back to disk. By overwriting a setuid binary or other trusted file, a local user can escalate privileges, potentially gaining full control of the affected system.
Advisories
No advisories yet.
Fixes
Solution
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Workaround
No workaround given by the vendor.
References
History
Fri, 26 Jun 2026 19:15:00 +0000
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| First Time appeared |
Freebsd
Freebsd freebsd |
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| Vendors & Products |
Freebsd
Freebsd freebsd |
Fri, 26 Jun 2026 16:30:00 +0000
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cvssV3_1
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Fri, 26 Jun 2026 15:15:00 +0000
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| Description | The KTLS receive path decrypted each record in place, assuming that the mbufs holding received data were anonymous and safe to modify. This assumption does not hold for data placed on a socket by sendfile(2), which can reference file-backed memory directly through non-anonymous M_EXTPG pages or EXT_SFBUF mbufs. When the sender transmits such data over a loopback connection without enabling KTLS on the transmit side, the file-backed mbufs reach the receiver's decryption path unchanged. Decrypting a record in place then overwrites the backing file's page cache instead of a private copy of the data. An unprivileged local user who can read a file can overwrite its contents with data of their choosing by sending the file over a loopback connection on which they have enabled KTLS receive. The write modifies the page cache directly, so it bypasses file flags such as schg and is written back to disk. By overwriting a setuid binary or other trusted file, a local user can escalate privileges, potentially gaining full control of the affected system. | |
| Title | Arbitrary file overwrite via the KTLS receive path | |
| Weaknesses | CWE-123 | |
| References |
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Projects
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Status: PUBLISHED
Assigner: freebsd
Published:
Updated: 2026-06-26T15:26:41.506Z
Reserved: 2026-05-11T16:27:44.891Z
Link: CVE-2026-45257
Updated: 2026-06-26T14:57:59.851Z
No data.
No data.
OpenCVE Enrichment
Updated: 2026-06-26T19:00:04Z
Weaknesses