The Virtual Machine Monitor (VMM) in Microsoft Virtual PC 2004 SP1, 2007, and 2007 SP1, and Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2 SP1, does not enforce CPU privilege-level requirements for all machine instructions, which allows guest OS users to execute arbitrary kernel-mode code and gain privileges within the guest OS via a crafted application, aka "Virtual PC and Virtual Server Privileged Instruction Decoding Vulnerability."
References
Configurations
Configuration 1 (hide)
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History
21 Nov 2024, 01:02
Type | Values Removed | Values Added |
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References | () http://secunia.com/advisories/35808 - | |
References | () http://www.securitytracker.com/id?1022544 - | |
References | () http://www.us-cert.gov/cas/techalerts/TA09-195A.html - US Government Resource | |
References | () http://www.vupen.com/english/advisories/2009/1890 - | |
References | () https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/security-updates/securitybulletins/2009/ms09-033 - | |
References | () https://oval.cisecurity.org/repository/search/definition/oval%3Aorg.mitre.oval%3Adef%3A6166 - |
Information
Published : 2009-07-15 15:30
Updated : 2024-11-21 01:02
NVD link : CVE-2009-1542
Mitre link : CVE-2009-1542
CVE.ORG link : CVE-2009-1542
JSON object : View
Products Affected
microsoft
- virtual_pc
- virtual_server
CWE
CWE-264
Permissions, Privileges, and Access Controls