Earlier this week, details were made public about four CVEs related to microprocessor flaws that impact systems hosting Red Hat OpenShift Online (Starter and Pro) and Red Hat OpenShift Dedicated. Some organizations are referring to these as “Fallout”, “ZombieLoad”, “RIDL”, or collectively as MDS (Microarchitectural Data Sampling). Read additional technical details at these links (CVE-2018-12127, CVE-2018-12126, CVE-2018-11091 and CVE-2018-12130), and a more general explanation here.  

The purpose of this blog is to notify our customers, and the community, of the actions Red Hat and the OpenShift SRE team have taken to patch and protect OpenShift Online and OpenShift Dedicated services.

Timeline:

  • On May 14, 2019, at approximately 17:00 UTC, Intel publicly announced the details of the flaws and remediations.
  • Shortly thereafter, OpenShift SRE initiated remediation on internal staging clusters and proceeded to the first Starter cluster at 21:00 (UTC).
  • Remediation on the remaining Starter and Pro clusters began the same day, finishing on May 15, after which further verification and validation was performed.
  • Remediation on all Dedicated clusters is in-progress, based on the preferred maintenance time-zones for each customer.

Any questions about the vulnerabilities or patches should be directed to Red Hat Support.

At Red Hat, the safety and security of our customers’ software and data is of utmost importance. Thank you for your continued trust and confidence in working with Red Hat.

This page will be updated with additional information as it becomes available.

Red Hat OpenShift SRE Team


About the author

Dave Baker has been with Red Hat since 2017.  He's currently working as a Design Architect in the Secure Engineering team within Product Security, and has spent the last years in various security related roles helping to protect Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform and many other products.

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