It was discovered that the KVM subsystem in the Linux kernel did not properly keep track of nested levels in guest page tables. A local attacker in a guest VM could use this to cause a denial of service (host OS crash) or possibly execute arbitrary code in the host OS.
{ "binaries": [ { "binary_name": "linux-cloud-tools-4.10.0-1009-gcp", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-gcp-cloud-tools-4.10.0-1009", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-gcp-cloud-tools-4.10.0-1009-dbgsym", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-gcp-headers-4.10.0-1009", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-gcp-tools-4.10.0-1009", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-gcp-tools-4.10.0-1009-dbgsym", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-headers-4.10.0-1009-gcp", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-image-4.10.0-1009-gcp", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-image-4.10.0-1009-gcp-dbgsym", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-image-extra-4.10.0-1009-gcp", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" }, { "binary_name": "linux-tools-4.10.0-1009-gcp", "binary_version": "4.10.0-1009.9" } ], "availability": "No subscription required" }