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Cisco warns of widespread software flaw

Affects Cisco devices that run IOS

By Paul Roberts, IDG News Service
July 17, 2003 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - Cisco Systems Inc. warned of a widespread and serious flaw in its Internetworking Operating System (IOS) that could make devices running it vulnerable to denial-of-service (DOS) attacks.
The flaw affects a wide range of Cisco devices that run IOS and accept data packets using IPv4, including Cisco's popular Catalyst family of switches, 7300 series routers and Aironet family of wireless access points.
Cisco devices are configured to accept IPv4 traffic by default, the company said yesterday.
A specially crafted sequence of IPv4 data packets sent to a device running a vulnerable version of IOS can cause the device to stop processing traffic, according to Cisco.
The unique sequence of IPv4 packets shuts down the Cisco devices by causing them to incorrectly designate the targeted device interface as full. Once flagged as full, the interface -- for example, an Ethernet interface processing network traffic -- will stop processing incoming traffic.
The IPv4 packets could be sent, in sequence, to each interface on an affected device, shutting those interfaces down and rendering the device inaccessible to administrators who need to access it remotely, the company said.
The packets can be sent directly to a vulnerable device, without requiring authorization by the attacker. Following an attack, the devices must be rebooted to clear the blocked interface, Cisco said.
In addition, devices under attack will not issue warnings or alarms, nor will they automatically reboot to correct the problem when the targeted interface has been marked as full.
The lack of warning could enable an attacker to silently cripple an organization's network by taking out key Cisco hardware that ties that network together.
Cisco dominates the worldwide market for networking gear such as switches and routers, and its products are among the most commonly used on the Internet and within companies.
That fact, coupled with the severity of the security flaw, prompted the CERT Coordination Center and security companies to issue warnings about the IOS vulnerability.
Cisco and CERT encouraged organizations with Cisco hardware running the affected versions of IOS to apply a software patch from Cisco.
Security company Internet Security Systems Inc. (ISS) issued an alert to its customers yesterday evening, notifying them of the flaw and recommending that they patch vulnerable systems as soon as possible, according to Dan Ingevaldson, engineering director of ISS's X-Force unit.
The company heard rumors about the flaw yesterday afternoon, as Internet backbone providers and service providers were contacted by Cisco about the flaw and announced unscheduled maintenance for their networks, he said.
While critical systems such as those used by Internet backbone providers are likely to be patched quickly, it may take some time for midsize and large companies to update IOS on the hundreds or even thousands of Cisco devices that tie their networks together, he said.
ISS is also concerned about the sheer volume of different IOS patches listed by Cisco in its 15-page advisory, Ingevaldson said.
Cisco had to create different IOS updates for the dozens of versions of the operating system that the company supports. The complexity of Cisco's different upgrade paths is likely to cause confusion among customers with multiple devices to manage.
In addition, one or more of those patched versions may contain a flaw that causes problems after the patch is applied, he said.
Organizations that are unable to apply the patch immediately can use a number of work-arounds, according to Cisco. For devices that have already been attacked, administrators can raise the ceiling on the input queue for each targeted interface to unblock those devices, the company said. Access control lists can also be used to block IPv4 traffic from unknown sources, Cisco said.








Reprinted with permission from IDG.net. Story copyright 2012 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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