CVS-2019-12255

Wind River VxWorks has a Buffer Overflow in the TCP component (issue 1 of 4). This is an IPNET security vulnerability: TCP Urgent Pointer = 0 that leads to an integer underflow.

The vulnerability affects a little-known feature of the TCP/IP protocol, sending out-of-band data, also known as urgent data. Although the feature is rarely used in the real world, its implementation, consisting of an “Urgent Flag” and an “Urgent Pointer”, is present in the header of every TCP packet. Exploiting these vulnerabilities does therefore not depend on any specific configuration. If a VxWorks device communicates using the TCP protocol, it is vulnerable. It also does not matter which side initiates a TCP connection. An attacker can exploit the vulnerabilities if the VxWorks device is operated as a server that accepts TCP connections, if the VxWorks device connects to a malicious host operated by the attacker, or as a man-in-the-middle, manipulating a TCP connection between the VxWorks device and a legitimate host.

CVE-2019-12258

This vulnerability affects established TCP sessions. An attacker who can figure out the source and destination TCP port and IP addresses of a session can inject invalid TCP segments into the flow, causing the TCP session to be reset.



Phoenix Contact Emalytics Controller ILC 2050 BI are developed and designed for the use in protected building automation networks.
An issue was discovered on Phoenix Contact Emalytics Controller ILC 2050 BI before 1.2.3 and BI-L before 1.2.3 devices. There is an insecure mechanism for read and write access to the configuration of the device. The mechanism can be discovered by examining a link on the website of the device.



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(Scoring for CVSS 2.0,3.0+3.1)
None
No CVE available
Low
0.1 <= 3.9
Medium
4.0 <= 6.9
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7.0 <= 8.9
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9.0 <= 10.0