Vulnerabilities (CVE)

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Filtered by product Certified Asterisk
CVE Vendors Products Updated CVSS v2 CVSS v3
CVE-2022-23608 4 Asterisk, Debian, Sangoma and 1 more 4 Certified Asterisk, Debian Linux, Asterisk and 1 more 2022-04-25 7.5 HIGH 9.8 CRITICAL
PJSIP is a free and open source multimedia communication library written in C language implementing standard based protocols such as SIP, SDP, RTP, STUN, TURN, and ICE. In versions up to and including 2.11.1 when in a dialog set (or forking) scenario, a hash key shared by multiple UAC dialogs can potentially be prematurely freed when one of the dialogs is destroyed . The issue may cause a dialog set to be registered in the hash table multiple times (with different hash keys) leading to undefined behavior such as dialog list collision which eventually leading to endless loop. A patch is available in commit db3235953baa56d2fb0e276ca510fefca751643f which will be included in the next release. There are no known workarounds for this issue.
CVE-2022-21723 4 Asterisk, Debian, Sangoma and 1 more 4 Certified Asterisk, Debian Linux, Asterisk and 1 more 2022-04-25 6.4 MEDIUM 9.1 CRITICAL
PJSIP is a free and open source multimedia communication library written in C language implementing standard based protocols such as SIP, SDP, RTP, STUN, TURN, and ICE. In versions 2.11.1 and prior, parsing an incoming SIP message that contains a malformed multipart can potentially cause out-of-bound read access. This issue affects all PJSIP users that accept SIP multipart. The patch is available as commit in the `master` branch. There are no known workarounds.
CVE-2021-37706 4 Asterisk, Debian, Sangoma and 1 more 4 Certified Asterisk, Debian Linux, Asterisk and 1 more 2022-04-25 9.3 HIGH 9.8 CRITICAL
PJSIP is a free and open source multimedia communication library written in C language implementing standard based protocols such as SIP, SDP, RTP, STUN, TURN, and ICE. In affected versions if the incoming STUN message contains an ERROR-CODE attribute, the header length is not checked before performing a subtraction operation, potentially resulting in an integer underflow scenario. This issue affects all users that use STUN. A malicious actor located within the victim’s network may forge and send a specially crafted UDP (STUN) message that could remotely execute arbitrary code on the victim’s machine. Users are advised to upgrade as soon as possible. There are no known workarounds.