Affected versions: SLES 16

📖 ~4 min read  •  Source: SUSE advisory RHSA-2026:1334 (see also SUSE bugzilla)

Related CVEs: CVE-2026-0861 CVE-2015-5180 CVE-2015-7547 CVE-2017-1000366 CVE-2017-1000408 CVE-2017-1000409 CVE-2018-1000001 CVE-2018-11236  +12 more

Upstream summary: Passing too large an alignment to the memalign suite of functions (memalign, posix_memalign, aligned_alloc) in the GNU C Library version 2.30 to 2.42 may result in an integer overflow, which could consequently result in a heap corruption. Note that the attacker must have control over both, the size as well as the alignment arguments of the memalign function to be able to exploit this. The size parameter must be close enough to PTRDIFF_MAX so as to overflow size_t along with t

Table of contents
  1. Symptom & Impact
  2. Environment & Reproduction
  3. Root Cause Analysis
  4. Quick Triage
  5. Step-by-Step Diagnosis
  6. Solution – Primary Fix
  7. Solution – Alternative Approaches
  8. Verification & Acceptance Criteria
  9. Rollback Plan
  10. Prevention & Hardening
  11. Related Errors & Cross-Refs
  12. References & Further Reading

Symptom & Impact

On SLES 16 hosts that have glibc installed, administrators report behaviour consistent with SUSE advisory RHSA-2026:1334: zypper patch-check lists open patches, services backed by glibc fail or restart unexpectedly, SELinux denials (avc) appear in ausearch — and for security-rated advisories the host is exposed to the vulnerability set above. Impact ranges from a single service-restart loop to wider availability incidents whenever glibc sits on the serving path.

Environment & Reproduction

Reproduction targets SLES 16. Confirm release, registration, and installed package:

cat /etc/os-release
SUSEConnect --status-text
SUSEConnect --list-extensions 2>/dev/null | head -30
rpm -q glibc
zypper info glibc | head -20

Trigger the workflow that exposes glibc — multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) — patch and remediation guide while collecting:

sudo journalctl -u glibc -b --no-pager | tail -200
sudo journalctl -xe --no-pager | tail -200
sudo tail -200 /var/log/zypp/history
sudo tail -200 /var/log/audit/audit.log
# For SUSE support, bundle evidence with supportconfig:
sudo supportconfig -R /var/tmp -B glibc

Root Cause Analysis

Root cause is documented in SUSE advisory RHSA-2026:1334. SUSE security maintainers shipped fixes in the corresponding glibc update for SLES 16; running an outdated build leaves the host exposed to the failure modes described in the advisory. Correlate zypper history with system logs:

sudo zypper history | grep glibc
sudo zypper history --since='-7 days' | tail -40
sudo ausearch -m AVC,USER_AVC -ts today | tail -100
cat /proc/sys/kernel/tainted   # non-zero = tainted kernel / out-of-tree modules

Quick Triage

Run these on SLES 16 to capture the current state of glibc:

rpm -q glibc                              # installed NVR
rpm -V glibc                              # verify shipped files
sudo zypper patch-check                    # open patches
sudo zypper lp -r SUSE-SLE-Server-16-* 2>/dev/null | head
systemctl --failed --no-pager
sudo firewall-cmd --list-all
getenforce                                  # SELinux mode
# If glibc ships a systemd unit (unit name may differ from pkg name, e.g.
# bind→named, postgresql-server→postgresql, php-fpm→php-fpm):
systemctl list-unit-files | grep -i glibc | head

Step-by-Step Diagnosis

  1. List failed systemd units.

    systemctl --failed --no-pager
  2. Tail the journal for glibc and the system bus.

    sudo journalctl -u glibc -f --no-pager
    sudo journalctl -xe -f --no-pager
  3. Inspect firewall posture (firewalld is the default on SLES 15+).

    sudo firewall-cmd --list-all-zones --permanent
    sudo nft list ruleset 2>/dev/null | head -50
  4. Surface SELinux denials and author a local policy module if needed.

    sudo ausearch -m AVC,USER_AVC -ts today
    sudo ausearch -m AVC -ts today | audit2allow -a -M /tmp/local-fix
    sudo semodule -i /tmp/local-fix.pp
  5. Verify glibc integrity and reinstall if anything is altered.

    sudo rpm -V glibc
    sudo zypper verify
    sudo zypper install --force glibc
  6. Correlate findings with /var/log/zypp/history, zypper history, and SUSE advisory RHSA-2026:1334 to pin the change that introduced glibc — multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) — patch and remediation guide.

Solution – Primary Fix

Apply the corrective zypper transaction referenced by SUSE advisory RHSA-2026:1334, then reload affected systemd units:

sudo zypper ref                        # refresh repos
sudo zypper -n patch                   # apply ALL open patches (recommended)
# Or target a single package:
sudo zypper -n update glibc
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
# Unit name may differ from pkg name; check first:
systemctl list-unit-files | grep -i glibc | head
sudo systemctl restart glibc
rpm -q glibc                           # confirm new NVR
systemctl is-active glibc 2>/dev/null  # confirm running (if a unit exists)

For kernel / glibc / systemd / openssl advisories a reboot is required (or SLE Live Patching where licensed):

sudo zypper ps -s                      # services using deleted libs
sudo systemctl reboot                  # or: sudo shutdown -r now
# SUSE Live Patching (kgraft / klp) avoids reboot for kernel CVEs:
sudo zypper install -y kernel-livepatch-$(uname -r | tr - _)
klp -v patches                         # active livepatches

Need help rolling this patch across a SUSE fleet? Our IT Solutions & Services team manages SUSE patch windows with SUSE Manager / RMT and Live Patching. Get in touch for a free consultation.

Solution – Alternative Approaches

If the primary patch is not viable, choose from these:

  • Roll back via Snapper (Btrfs snapshots taken automatically before zypper transactions on SLES 16):

    sudo snapper list
    sudo snapper undochange <pre>..<post>  # diff between two snapshot numbers
    sudo snapper rollback <pre>            # boot the host into the chosen snapshot
  • Lock the package so zypper cannot upgrade it:

    sudo zypper al glibc                   # add lock
    zypper ll | grep glibc                 # list locks
    sudo zypper rl glibc                   # remove lock
  • Install an older NVR if a regression is suspected:

    zypper se -s glibc                     # show all available versions
    sudo zypper install --oldpackage glibc-<older-NVR>
  • Switch SELinux to permissive briefly to confirm policy is the cause, then re-enforce:

    sudo setenforce 0
    # reproduce, capture denials, author a custom module:
    sudo ausearch -m AVC -ts recent | audit2allow -a -M mylocal
    sudo semodule -i mylocal.pp
    sudo setenforce 1
  • Where SLE Live Patching is licensed, apply kernel fixes without reboot:

    klp -v patches                         # active livepatches
    sudo zypper install -y kernel-livepatch-$(uname -r | tr - _)

Verification & Acceptance Criteria

All of these should pass after the fix:

rpm -q glibc                                            # expected fixed NVR
sudo zypper patch-check                                  # 0 critical patches outstanding
systemctl is-active glibc 2>/dev/null
sudo journalctl -u glibc --since "5 minutes ago" --no-pager | grep -iE "error|fail" || echo OK
sudo firewall-cmd --list-services
getenforce
sudo zypper ps -s                                        # any services still using deleted libs

The original reproduction for glibc — multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) — patch and remediation guide must not trigger across two consecutive runs.

Rollback Plan

Capture state before any change:

rpm -qa > /root/rpm-pre.txt
sudo zypper history list > /root/zypper-history-pre.txt
# Snapper takes pre/post snapshots automatically on Btrfs root.
sudo snapper create -d 'pre-patch-glibc'   # explicit named snapshot
sudo snapper list | head

To revert if the patch is bad:

# Preferred on Btrfs root — boot the prior snapshot:
sudo snapper rollback <snapshot-id>
sudo systemctl reboot
# Or downgrade just the package:
sudo zypper install --oldpackage glibc-<older-NVR>
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl restart glibc
# Custom security policy cleanup:
sudo semodule -r mylocal

Prevention & Hardening

Reduce the chance of this recurring on SLES 16:

  • Enable automatic patch installation:

    sudo zypper install -y zypper-automatic
    sudo systemctl enable --now zypper-automatic.timer
    # Or use YaST: yast2 online_update_configuration
  • Subscribe to sle-security-updates and watch suse.com/support/update.

  • Mirror through SUSE Manager or RMT (Repository Mirroring Tool) for controlled rollouts:

    sudo zypper install -y rmt-server rmt-cli
    sudo rmt-cli sync
    sudo rmt-cli products enable SLES/16/x86_64
  • Lock sensitive packages so they cannot be auto-upgraded:

    sudo zypper al glibc
  • Ensure Snapper is enabled on the root subvolume and pre/post hooks run for every zypper transaction:

    sudo snapper -c root get-config | head
    # Default zypper plugin: /usr/lib/zypp/plugins/commit/snapper.zypp-commit-plugin
  • Monitor file integrity with AIDE:

    sudo zypper install -y aide
    sudo aide --init && sudo mv /var/lib/aide/aide.db.new /var/lib/aide/aide.db
    sudo aide --check
  • Subscribe to SUSE Live Patching so kernel CVEs can be remediated without reboot:

    sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-module-live-patching/16.0/x86_64
    sudo zypper install -y kernel-livepatch-$(uname -r | tr - _)
    klp -v patches
  • SLES 16 ships with SELinux in enforcing mode by default; review and maintain custom modules in /etc/selinux/targeted/ rather than disabling enforcement.

  • Apply CIS SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Benchmark hardening.

Issues that commonly surface alongside glibc — multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) — patch and remediation guide: zypper lock contention, systemd unit ordering cycles, SELinux AVC bursts, firewalld zone drift, and kernel taint flags. Useful triage:

sudo zypper ps -s
systemd-analyze critical-chain
sudo ausearch -m AVC -ts today | tail
sudo firewall-cmd --get-active-zones
cat /proc/sys/kernel/tainted

View all sles-16 tutorials on the Tutorials Hub →

Browse all common problems & solutions on the Tutorials Hub.

References & Further Reading

Primary reference: SUSE advisory RHSA-2026:1334 (see also SUSE bugzilla). Manual pages useful on SLES 16:

man zypper
man zypper.conf
man systemctl
man journalctl
man firewall-cmd
man snapper
man semanage
man audit2allow
man SUSEConnect
man klp

Other resources: SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 16 documentation, suse.com/security, SUSE security blog, and per-package notes in /usr/share/doc/packages/glibc/ for components implicated in glibc — multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) — patch and remediation guide.