CVE-2026-45859

Published: Mag 27, 2026 Last Modified: Mag 27, 2026
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Other exploit source:
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Description

AI Translation Available

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:

netfilter: nfnetlink_queue: do shared-unconfirmed check before segmentation

Ulrich reports a regression with nfqueue:

If an application did not set the 'F_GSO' capability flag and a gso
packet with an unconfirmed nf_conn entry is received all packets are
now dropped instead of queued, because the check happens after
skb_gso_segment(). In that case, we did have exclusive ownership
of the skb and its associated conntrack entry. The elevated use
count is due to skb_clone happening via skb_gso_segment().

Move the check so that its peformed vs. the aggregated packet.

Then, annotate the individual segments except the first one so we
can do a 2nd check at reinject time.

For the normal case, where userspace does in-order reinjects, this avoids
packet drops: first reinjected segment continues traversal and confirms
entry, remaining segments observe the confirmed entry.

While at it, simplify nf_ct_drop_unconfirmed(): We only care about
unconfirmed entries with a refcnt > 1, there is no need to special-case
dying entries.

This only happens with UDP. With TCP, the only unconfirmed packet will
be the TCP SYN, those aren't aggregated by GRO.

Next patch adds a udpgro test case to cover this scenario.

https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/207b3ebacb6113acaaec0d171d5307032c690004
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/23901aa6b8a2f294c4b774436b4691f3ff863a8f
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/79b713ef4261a8ead96af4703f89d0b5f25532e2
https://git.kernel.org/stable/c/b740e7ddd7ca0dbfeafca3f5e52717206cf28524