How to fix CVE-2024-21626 – Step-by-Step Guide
CVE-2024-21626, known as "Leaky Vessels," is a critical runc container escape vulnerability. This high-severity flaw (CVSS 8.6) allows attackers to break out of container isolation. It affects popular container runtimes like Docker, Kubernetes, and containerd.
What is runc Container Escape – Leaky Vessels?
This vulnerability stems from a file descriptor leak within runc, the low-level container runtime. An attacker inside a container can exploit this leak via `/proc/self/fd` to gain unauthorized access to host resources. This bypasses container isolation, leading to a full host compromise. It impacts runc versions prior to 1.1.12.
Impact and Risks for your Infrastructure
The primary impact is a complete container escape, granting root privileges on the underlying host system. This allows attackers to compromise other containers, access sensitive host data, or deploy malicious software. Such a breach can lead to significant data loss, service disruption, and reputational damage.
Step-by-Step Mitigation Guide
To mitigate CVE-2024-21626, update runc to version 1.1.12 or higher immediately. For Docker, Kubernetes, or containerd, ensure your runtime components are updated to versions incorporating the fix. Verify the update by checking your runc version and confirming no vulnerable containers are running.
- 1Update runc to 1.1.12 or later.
- 2Update Docker to 25.0.2+ / 24.0.9+ and containerd to 1.7.13+ / 1.6.27+.
- 3Run containers as non-root with --user and --cap-drop=ALL.
- 4Enable Seccomp and AppArmor/SELinux profiles for containers.
- 5Restrict /proc access with read-only mounts where possible.
- 6Run containers in rootless mode (Podman, rootless Docker) for defense-in-depth.