azure linux

  1. Azure Linux Attestation Explained for CVE-2024-41010 and Other Microsoft Artifacts

    Microsoft’s brief MSRC note that “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected by this vulnerability” is accurate — but it is a product‑scoped attestation, not proof that no other Microsoft artifact can contain the same vulnerable code. Background The...
  2. CVE-2024-41007: Azure Linux Attestation and Other Microsoft Kernels

    Microsoft’s short, product‑scoped wording on CVE‑2024‑41007 — that “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” — is accurate for the Azure Linux product family, but it is not a technical guarantee that no other Microsoft product could also include the...
  3. Azure Linux REXML CVE: Attestation Not Exclusive Triage Microsoft Artifacts

    Microsoft’s short, product‑scoped statement that “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” is accurate — but it is an inventory attestation for a single product, not a technical guarantee that no other Microsoft product or image can contain the same...
  4. CVE-2024-39884: Apache Regression, Azure Linux Attestation, and Cross-Product Risk

    Apache’s CVE-2024-39884 — a regression in the 2.4.60 line that can cause local source files to be served raw when legacy content-type handlers (for example, AddType-based PHP mappings) are used — is fixed upstream, and Microsoft’s Security Response Center (MSRC) has publicly confirmed that Azure...
  5. CVE-2024-39495: Azure Linux Attestation and the Greybus UAF Risk

    The Linux kernel vulnerability tracked as CVE-2024-39495 is a use-after-free in the greybus subsystem (gb_interface_release) triggered by a race between workqueue execution and object teardown, and Microsoft’s Security Response Center (MSRC) has publicly attested that Azure Linux includes the...
  6. CVE-2024-39483 and Azure Linux Attestations: A Practical Security Guide

    Microsoft’s short advisory that “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” is accurate — but it is a product‑scoped inventory attestation, not proof that no other Microsoft product or artifact could contain the same vulnerable code. erview...
  7. CVE-2024-39476: Azure Linux Attestation and RAID5 Deadlock Patch Guidance

    The Linux kernel fix addressing CVE-2024-39476 — a deadlock in the md/raid5 subsystem where raid5d() could wait for itself to clear MD_SB_CHANGE_PENDING — is an important stability patch that has rippled through distributions and cloud images. Microsoft’s public guidance has confirmed that Azure...
  8. Azure Linux Attestation: CVE-2024-39474 and Product Scope

    A carefully scoped upstream fix for a Linux kernel memory-allocation bug—tracked as CVE-2024-39474—has rekindled an operational question many administrators ask when a vendor publishes a product-scoped vulnerability attestation: when Microsoft says “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library...
  9. CVE-2024-39472 XFS Bug: Azure Linux Attestation and Artifact Verification

    The Linux kernel vulnerability tracked as CVE-2024-39472 — an XFS log recovery buffer allocation bug tied to a legacy h_size fixup — is real, patched upstream, and Microsoft’s public guidance currently names Azure Linux as the Microsoft product they have attested contains the affected...
  10. Azure Linux and CVE-2021-33195: Attestation Limits and Go DNS Risk

    Microsoft’s one‑line advisory that “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” is accurate — but it is a product‑level attestation, not a claim that no other Microsoft product can possibly include the vulnerable Go code behind CVE‑2021‑33195...
  11. Azure Linux Attestations Explained: Other Microsoft Artifacts May Also Harbor Vulnerabilities

    Microsoft’s one-line advisory that “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” is accurate for the product it names — and at the same time it is not a categorical guarantee that no other Microsoft product can include the same vulnerable component...
  12. CVE-2025-38098: Azure Linux Attestation vs Other Microsoft Artifacts

    Microsoft’s short, machine‑readable attestation that “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” is accurate for Azure Linux builds — but it is a product‑scoped statement, not proof that no other Microsoft artifact includes the same vulnerable upstream...
  13. Azure Linux and CVE-2025-54090: Not the Only Microsoft Affected

    The short answer is: No — Azure Linux is not necessarily the only Microsoft product that can include the vulnerable Apache HTTP Server code, but it is the only Microsoft product Microsoft has publicly attested so far to include the affected library; that attestation is authoritative for Azure...
  14. CVE-2025-53905 Vim Tar.vim: Azure Linux Attestation and Remediation Guide

    The short answer is: No — “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” is a product‑level attestation, not a statement of exclusivity. Microsoft has publicly confirmed that Azure Linux was found to include the vulnerable Vim component for this CVE, and...
  15. CVE-2025-5351: libssh Double Free in Azure Linux and Defender Guide

    The newly assigned CVE‑2025‑5351 exposes a double‑free bug in libssh’s key export path — a subtle memory‑management defect in the library’s pki_key_to_blob() routine that can corrupt the heap during error handling and, under constrained conditions, crash or destabilize applications that perform...
  16. CVE-2025-38348: Linux p54 USB Buffer Overflow and Azure Linux Attestation

    The Linux kernel vulnerability tracked as CVE-2025-38348 is a small but meaningful buffer‑overflow in the p54 wireless driver (function p54_rx_eeprom_readback()) that can be triggered by a malicious USB device posing as an Intersil p54 Wi‑Fi interface — and while Microsoft’s MSRC entry...
  17. Azure Linux CVE-2025-38321: Attestation Limits and Cross Product Risk

    Microsoft’s short MSRC attestation that “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” is accurate for CVE‑2025‑38321 — but it is a product‑scoped inventory statement, not a proof that no other Microsoft product or image could contain the same vulnerable...
  18. CVE-2025-38307 Explained: Azure Linux Attestation and Broader Microsoft Risk

    Microsoft’s brief public mapping for CVE-2025-38307 — “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” — is accurate for the product it names, but it is a product‑scoped inventory attestation, not a technical guarantee that no other Microsoft product can...
  19. CVE-2025-38260: Azure Linux remediation confirmed; other Microsoft artifacts unverified

    Microsoft’s short MSRC line that “Azure Linux includes this open‑source library and is therefore potentially affected” is correct — but it is a product‑scoped attestation, not a universal guarantee that no other Microsoft product can contain the same vulnerable btrfs code. Treat Azure Linux as a...
  20. CVE-2025-38244: Azure Linux Attestation and SMB Deadlock Patch Reality

    The Linux kernel vulnerability tracked as CVE-2025-38244 — described upstream as “smb: client: fix potential deadlock when reconnecting channels” — is a clear reminder that modern vendor transparency programs are useful but incomplete: Microsoft has attested that the Azure Linux distribution...