CVE-2022-50411
BaseFortify
Publication date: 2025-09-18
Last updated on: 2025-12-12
Assigner: kernel.org
Description
Description
CVSS Scores
EPSS Scores
| Probability: | |
| Percentile: |
Meta Information
Affected Vendors & Products
| Vendor | Product | Version / Range |
|---|---|---|
| linux | linux_kernel | to 4.9.337 (exc) |
| linux | linux_kernel | From 4.10 (inc) to 4.14.303 (exc) |
| linux | linux_kernel | From 4.15 (inc) to 4.19.270 (exc) |
| linux | linux_kernel | From 4.20 (inc) to 5.4.229 (exc) |
| linux | linux_kernel | From 5.5 (inc) to 5.10.163 (exc) |
| linux | linux_kernel | From 5.11 (inc) to 5.15.86 (exc) |
| linux | linux_kernel | From 5.16 (inc) to 6.0.16 (exc) |
| linux | linux_kernel | From 6.1 (inc) to 6.1.2 (exc) |
Helpful Resources
Exploitability
| CWE ID | Description |
|---|---|
| CWE-416 | The product reuses or references memory after it has been freed. At some point afterward, the memory may be allocated again and saved in another pointer, while the original pointer references a location somewhere within the new allocation. Any operations using the original pointer are no longer valid because the memory "belongs" to the code that operates on the new pointer. |
Attack-Flow Graph
AI Powered Q&A
Can you explain this vulnerability to me?
This vulnerability is a use-after-free issue in the Linux kernel's ACPICA component. Specifically, after a failed call to acpi_ds_call_control_method(), a memory object (next_walk_state) is freed but not properly removed from the thread's state stack. As a result, subsequent calls incorrectly access this freed memory, leading to potential instability or exploitation.
How can this vulnerability impact me? :
The use-after-free vulnerability can lead to undefined behavior such as system crashes, memory corruption, or potentially allow an attacker to execute arbitrary code with kernel privileges, compromising system security and stability.