"Cisco Patches DoS Vulnerabilities in Networking Products"

Cisco recently announced patches for multiple IOS and IOS XE software vulnerabilities that could be exploited without authentication to cause a denial-of-service (DoS) condition.  The most severe of the flaws, with a CVSS score of 8.6, impact the Locator ID Separation Protocol (LISP), IPv4 Software-Defined Access (SD-Access) fabric edge node, Internet Key Exchange version 1 (IKEv1) fragmentation, and DHCP snooping features of IOS and IOS XE software, and the IP packet processing of AP software.  Cisco noted that the issues exist because LISP packets, certain IPv4 packets, and crafted IPv4 DHCP request packets are incorrectly handled, and fragmented IKEv1 packets are not properly reassembled on devices running vulnerable IOS and IOS XE versions, and because certain IPv4 packets are improperly validated on certain AP products.  Four other high-severity security defects were identified in the multicast DNS (mDNS) gateway and OSPF version 2 (OSPFv2) features of IOS and IOS XE, and in the Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System (IS-IS) protocol of the software.  Cisco noted that an adjacent or remote attacker could exploit all issues without authentication by sending crafted packets or requests.  Another vulnerability Cisco patched recently is a secure boot bypass affecting AP software, which could allow an unauthenticated, physical attacker to load modified software images.  The issue exists because unnecessary commands can be accessed via the physical console during boot.  Cisco also announced patches for seven medium-severity flaws leading to privilege escalation, command injection, protection bypasses, and DoS conditions.  The issues impact IOS XE software, Catalyst Center, and Aironet AP software.  Cisco says it is not aware of any of these vulnerabilities being exploited in the wild. 

 

SecurityWeek reports: "Cisco Patches DoS Vulnerabilities in Networking Products"

Submitted by Adam Ekwall on