CVE-2025-1272: Fedora Kernel Lockdown Silently Disabled — Local Privilege Escalation Risk Exposed

CVE-2025-1272

CVE ID: CVE-2025-1272
Affected Component: Fedora Linux Kernel
Issue: Kernel Lockdown Mode Disabled by Default (Regression)
CVSS v3.1 Base Score: 7.7 (High)
Severity: High / Important
Attack Vector: Local
Privileges Required: Low (local user access required)
User Interaction: None
Exploit Availability: No public weaponized exploit observed; technique-based abuse possible
Impact: Privilege Escalation, Kernel Compromise, Secure Boot Bypass


Overview

CVE-2025-1272 is a security regression affecting specific Fedora Linux kernel builds where kernel lockdown mode was unintentionally disabled by default. Lockdown mode is a kernel security feature that restricts powerful operations even for the root user when Secure Boot is enabled. It acts as a safeguard against unsigned kernel modules, raw memory access, and certain hardware-level operations.

Due to a packaging or configuration regression in Fedora’s 6.12.x kernel builds, systems that were expected to enforce lockdown protections were left running with lockdown set to none. As a result, protections designed to preserve Secure Boot trust boundaries were not enforced.

This vulnerability does not allow remote code execution on its own. However, if a local attacker already has user-level access, it becomes significantly easier to escalate privileges to full kernel compromise.


Technical Background

Kernel lockdown operates in two modes:

  • Integrity mode – Prevents modification of the running kernel.
  • Confidentiality mode – Prevents both modification and kernel memory disclosure.

When functioning correctly under Secure Boot, lockdown prevents:

  • Loading unsigned kernel modules
  • Access to /dev/mem and /dev/kmem
  • Arbitrary PCI BAR mapping
  • Use of iopl() and ioperm()
  • Certain eBPF and kprobe operations
  • Kernel kexec of unsigned images

In affected Fedora kernels, this enforcement was not automatically activated even when Secure Boot was enabled.


Affected Systems

  • Fedora Linux systems running affected 6.12.x kernel builds
  • Systems relying on Secure Boot for trust enforcement
  • Multi-user systems where local untrusted access exists

Systems can be verified by checking:

cat /sys/kernel/security/lockdown

If the output shows:

none

Then lockdown is not active and the system is exposed.


Impact

If exploited, the following could occur:

  • Arbitrary unsigned kernel module loading
  • Persistent kernel-level rootkits
  • Secure Boot trust boundary bypass
  • Kernel memory disclosure
  • Hardware-level manipulation
  • Escalation from local user to full kernel compromise

Because kernel modules run with ring-0 privileges, successful abuse effectively grants full control over the operating system.


Exploitation Scenarios

1. Unsigned Kernel Module Injection

A local attacker compiles or drops a malicious kernel module and loads it using:

insmod malicious.ko

With lockdown disabled, signature verification is not enforced.

2. Kernel Memory Access

An attacker accesses /dev/mem to manipulate kernel structures:

dd if=/dev/mem of=dump.bin bs=1M count=10

This can be used to defeat KASLR or extract credentials.

3. Hardware-Level Manipulation

Use of iopl() or direct PCI access to alter system memory or bypass controls.

4. Persistence via Rootkit

A malicious module can be installed into /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/ and configured to load at boot.


Proof of Concept (Educational Use Only)

There is no officially published exploit for CVE-2025-1272. However, exploitation does not require a complex exploit chain. The vulnerability weakens protection, enabling techniques that are normally blocked.

Educational demonstration:

  1. Compile a simple unsigned module:
#include <linux/module.h>
int init_module(void) { return 0; }
void cleanup_module(void) {}
MODULE_LICENSE("GPL");
  1. Build:
make -C /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/build M=$(pwd) modules
  1. Load:
sudo insmod example.ko

If loaded successfully on a Secure Boot-enabled system without lockdown enforcement, the system is vulnerable.

This should only be performed in a controlled lab environment.


Detection Methods

Lockdown Status Check

cat /sys/kernel/security/lockdown

Expected secure state:

integrity

or

confidentiality

Kernel Log Monitoring

dmesg | grep -i lockdown
journalctl -k | grep -i lockdown

Look for:

  • Absence of lockdown initialization messages
  • Module verification failures
  • Unexpected module loading entries

Auditd Rules

Add persistent rules:

-a always,exit -F arch=b64 -S init_module -k kernel_module
-a always,exit -F arch=b64 -S finit_module -k kernel_module
-a always,exit -F arch=b64 -S iopl -k io_priv
-a always,exit -F arch=b64 -S ioperm -k io_perm

Search logs:

ausearch -k kernel_module
ausearch -k io_priv

Splunk Detection Query

index=linux_logs ("init_module" OR "finit_module")
| stats count by user, host, process_name
| where count > 0

Detect unsigned module warnings:

index=linux_logs ("module verification failed" OR "Lockdown:")

Elastic / KQL Query

process.name:("insmod" OR "modprobe") OR
message:("init_module" OR "module verification failed")

OSQuery Detection

Check unsigned or unexpected modules:

SELECT name, version, source
FROM kernel_modules
WHERE source NOT LIKE '/lib/modules/%';

Check for lockdown state:

SELECT * FROM kernel_info WHERE arguments LIKE '%lockdown%';

Indicators of Exploitation

  • Unknown .ko files in /lib/modules/
  • Modules loaded that are not part of Fedora packages
  • Kernel logs showing signature failures
  • Audit logs for init_module from non-root service accounts
  • Unexpected BPF programs loaded
  • Access to /dev/mem

Mitigation

Immediate Workaround

Force lockdown at boot:

Edit GRUB configuration:

GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="lockdown=integrity"

Then regenerate configuration and reboot.


Permanent Fix (Official Patch)

Upgrade to the fixed Fedora kernel build.

Official Fedora Update Advisory:

https://bodhi.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2025-d9b0fecaed

Upgrade using:

sudo dnf upgrade --refresh

or:

sudo dnf upgrade --advisory FEDORA-2025-d9b0fecaed

Reboot after upgrade.


Log Sources to Monitor

  • /var/log/messages
  • journalctl -k
  • auditd logs
  • /lib/modules/ file integrity
  • Secure Boot firmware logs
  • eBPF program listings (bpftool prog show)

Risk Assessment

Although this vulnerability does not provide direct remote compromise, it significantly weakens system hardening. On developer machines, CI runners, shared servers, and research systems, risk increases substantially because local code execution is common.

If Secure Boot trust is part of compliance posture, affected systems may be considered non-compliant until patched.


MITRE ATT&CK Mapping

  • T1068 – Exploitation for Privilege Escalation
  • T1547 – Boot or Logon Autostart Execution
  • T1542 – Pre-OS Boot
  • T1005 – Data from Local System

Final Assessment

CVE-2025-1272 is a security regression that disables a key defensive boundary. It does not introduce new kernel memory corruption, but it removes enforcement that prevents kernel abuse. In practical terms, it lowers the barrier for kernel-level persistence and privilege escalation.

Systems running affected Fedora kernels should be upgraded immediately. Lockdown mode should be verified post-upgrade to ensure it reports integrity or confidentiality.


Aegiron

Backed by 11+ years in cybersecurity and incident response, we decode the latest threats shaping today’s digital battlefield. This blog cuts through the noise with clear insights on vulnerabilities, emerging exploits, and the cyber news defenders can’t afford to miss.