Affected versions: SLES 16

πŸ“– ~4 min read  β€’  Source: SUSE advisory ESSA-2026:0092 (see also SUSE bugzilla)

Related CVEs: CVE-2026-43284 CVE-2026-43500 CVE-2026-31431 CVE-2026-23204 CVE-2026-23231 CVE-2026-23239 CVE-2026-23240 CVE-2026-23243  +12 more

Upstream summary: In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: xfrm: esp: avoid in-place decrypt on shared skb frags MSG_SPLICE_PAGES can attach pages from a pipe directly to an skb. TCP marks such skbs with SKBFL_SHARED_FRAG after skb_splice_from_iter(), so later paths that may modify packet data can first make a private copy. The IPv4/IPv6 datagram append paths did not set this flag when splicing pages into UDP skbs. That leaves an ESP-in-UDP packet made from shared pi

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 running kernel, administrators report behaviour consistent with SUSE advisory ESSA-2026:0092: zypper refusing to install or restart affected services, AppArmor profile warnings in journalctl, and β€” for security-rated advisories β€” exposure to the vulnerability set above. In production estates the visible impact ranges from a single service restart to wider availability incidents whenever kernel sits on the serving path.

Environment & Reproduction

Reproduction targets SLES 16. Confirm release with cat /etc/os-release and SUSEConnect --status-text, and the currently installed package with rpm -q kernel. Capture system state with supportconfig -R /var/tmp -B kernel if you need to attach evidence to a SUSE support case. Trigger the workflow that exposes kernel β€” multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) β€” patch and remediation guide while collecting journalctl -b, zypper history, and rpm -qa output.

Root Cause Analysis

Root cause is documented in SUSE advisory ESSA-2026:0092. Upstream maintainers shipped fixes in the corresponding kernel update for SLES 16; running an outdated build leaves the host exposed to the failure modes described in the advisory. Correlate journalctl --since timestamps with zypper history entries and any AppArmor denials in /var/log/audit/audit.log to isolate the originating change.

Quick Triage

Quick triage: run systemctl status kernel, journalctl -u kernel -n 200, zypper patch-check, zypper lp, firewall-cmd --list-all, and aa-status. If AppArmor is in enforce mode, capture journalctl -k | grep apparmor to surface denials linked to kernel β€” multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) β€” patch and remediation guide.

Step-by-Step Diagnosis

1) Confirm symptom with systemctl --failed. 2) Inspect logs: journalctl -xe and journalctl -u kernel. 3) Validate firewall: firewall-cmd --list-all-zones. 4) Check AppArmor: aa-status and journalctl -k | grep apparmor. 5) Verify package integrity: rpm -V kernel and zypper verify. 6) Correlate findings with zypper history, /var/log/zypp/history, and SUSE advisory ESSA-2026:0092 to pin the change that introduced kernel β€” multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) β€” patch and remediation guide.

Solution – Primary Fix

Primary fix for kernel β€” multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) β€” patch and remediation guide: apply the corrective zypper transaction described in SUSE advisory ESSA-2026:0092, reload the affected systemd unit, and reconcile firewalld and AppArmor state. Typical commands: sudo zypper ref, sudo zypper -n patch or sudo zypper -n update kernel, sudo systemctl daemon-reload, sudo systemctl restart kernel, then rpm -q kernel to validate the new build is installed. For kernel advisories add sudo systemctl reboot or schedule a Live Patch (kgraft/klp) where covered by your SUSE subscription.

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Solution – Alternative Approaches

Alternatives include rolling back the offending transaction with sudo zypper history --rollback <id> (Btrfs Snapper snapshots make this safe on SLES 16), locking the package via sudo zypper al kernel, switching firewalld backends between nftables and iptables in /etc/firewalld/firewalld.conf, or temporarily disabling the AppArmor profile with sudo aa-disable /etc/apparmor.d/usr.sbin.kernel to confirm policy is the cause before authoring a custom profile. Where Live Patching is licensed, klp patches applies kernel fixes without reboot.

Verification & Acceptance Criteria

Acceptance: rpm -q kernel shows the expected fixed version, systemctl is-active kernel returns active, journalctl -u kernel --since "5 minutes ago" shows no errors, zypper patch-check reports zero open patches for this advisory, firewall-cmd --list-services includes the required services, aa-status reports the intended profile mode, and the original reproduction steps for kernel β€” multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) β€” patch and remediation guide no longer trigger the failure across two consecutive runs.

Rollback Plan

Capture state with zypper history list, snapper list, and rpm -qa > /root/rpm-pre.txt before any change. To revert, run sudo snapper undochange <pre>..<post> on Btrfs deployments or sudo zypper install --oldpackage kernel-<old-version> and reload systemctl daemon-reload. Remove custom AppArmor profiles with sudo apparmor_parser -R. Reboot if the kernel or initramfs was changed and re-verify symptoms.

Prevention & Hardening

Prevent recurrence by enabling automatic security patches with zypper-automatic or YaST > Online Update Configuration, subscribing to the SUSE-SU mailing list, mirroring through SUSE Manager / RMT for controlled rollouts, version-locking sensitive packages with zypper al, and monitoring file integrity with aide --check. Apply CIS SLES 16 hardening, enable Snapper rollbacks on Btrfs root, and where supported enable SUSE Live Patching so future advisories like this can be remediated without reboot.

Related issues that commonly surface alongside kernel β€” multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) β€” patch and remediation guide: zypper transaction lock contention, systemd unit ordering cycles, AppArmor denials in journalctl -k, firewalld zone drift, and kernel taint flags shown by cat /proc/sys/kernel/tainted. See sibling common-problem articles in this SLES 16 series for adjacent failure modes.

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References & Further Reading

Primary reference: SUSE advisory ESSA-2026:0092 (see also SUSE bugzilla). Supporting docs: SUSE Linux Enterprise Server Administration Guide, man zypper, man systemctl, man firewall-cmd, man aa-status, man snapper, man journalctl, the SUSE patch finder at suse.com/patches/, and the SUSE Live Patching documentation. Review /usr/share/doc/packages/kernel/ for component-level notes implicated in kernel β€” multiple vulnerabilities (20 CVEs) β€” patch and remediation guide.