-
Six vulnerabilities involving Access Control List (ACL) has been discovered in multiple releases of Cisco IOS® Software Release for Cisco 12000 Series Internet Routers. Not all vulnerabilities are present in all IOS releases and only line cards based on the Engine 2 are affected by them.
No other Cisco product is vulnerable.
The workarounds are described in the Workarounds section.
This advisory is available at https://sec.cloudapps.cisco.com/security/center/content/CiscoSecurityAdvisory/cisco-sa-20011114-gsr-acl
-
This section provides details on affected products.
Vulnerable Products
Only Cisco 12000 Series Internet Routers with line cards based on Engine 2 are affected with these vulnerabilities. Not all line cards of a Cisco 12000 Series are affected by all vulnerabilities. Vulnerabilities are present in the underlying technology an individual line card is based upon. That technology is called "Engine". Currently Cisco is shipping line cards based on the following Engines: 0, 1, 2, 3 and 4.
To determine what Engine your card is based on, you need to log on the Cisco 12000 router and issue "sh diag" command while in enable mode. The engine type will be displayed as "L3 Engine: x" where x will be the corresponding number.
The following example shows the output for an Engine 2 based line card.
c12000#sh diag SLOT 1 (RP/LC 1 ): 1 Port Packet Over SONET OC-48c/STM-16 Single Mode/SR SC-SC connector MAIN: type 41, 800-5271-01 rev A0 dev 0 HW config: 0x04 SW key: 00-00-00 PCA: 73-3295-05 rev A0 ver 5 HW version 1.1 S/N SDK034004AY MBUS: Embedded Agent Test hist: 0x00 RMA#: 00-00-00 RMA hist: 0x00 DIAG: Test count: 0x00000000 Test results: 0x00000000 L3 Engine: 2 - Backbone OC48 (2.5 Gbps) ^^^^^^^^^^^ <- Note the engine type [further output truncated]
These vulnerabilities are affecting line cards based on Engine 2.
Products Confirmed Not Vulnerable
No other Cisco products are currently known to be affected by these vulnerabilities.
-
Six vulnerabilities were found in IOS releases that are supporting Cisco 12000 platforms. Only line cards based on Engine 2 are affected.
-
CSCdm44976
ACL will not block non initial fragments of a packet. This Cisco bug ID is adding a support for "fragment" keyword in the ACL. The White Paper Access Control Lists and IP Fragments describes how keyword fragment modifies behavior of ACL.
-
CSCdu57417
The keyword "fragment" in the compiled ACL (Turbo ACL) is ignored if a packet is destined to the router itself.
-
CSCdu03323
The implicit "deny ip any any" rule at the end of an ACL is ignored if an ACL of exactly 448 entries is applied on an interface as an outgoing ACL. An ACL with any other number of rules, greater or less than 448, is unaffected by this vulnerability.
-
CSCdu35175
A support for "fragment" keyword in an outgoing ACL is added. Previously, only incoming ACL supported this keyword and outgoing ACL was ignoring it.
-
CSCdt96370
An outbound Access Control List (ACL) may not block all intended traffic on a router when an input ACL is configured on some, but not all, interfaces of a multi port Engine 2 line card. The prerequisite is that, the traffic in question, was not filtered by an inbound ACL on the ingress port. An ACL applied at the ingress point will work as expected and block desired traffic.
-
CSCdt69741
Packet fragments are not filtered by the ACL despite using "fragment" keyword. The White Paper Access Control Lists and IP Fragments describes how keyword fragment modifies behavior of ACL.
-
CSCdm44976
-
CSCddm44976
There is no direct workaround for this vulnerability. If feasible, packet fragments may be filtered before they reach the GSR.
CSCdu57417
There is no direct workaround for this vulnerability. If feasible, packet fragments may be filtered before they reach the GSR.
CSCdu03323
The workaround is to either shorten the ACL to be less than 448 lines in length or to explicitly add rule "deny ip any any" as the last statement.
CSCdu35175
The workaround is to transform an ACL to an incoming ACL instead of the outgoing one.
CSCdt96370
Apply an ACL on all ports on the ingress line card. If a particular port is supposed to not block any traffic, then apply the ACL of the form access-list xy permit ip any any.
CSCdt69741
There is no direct workaround for this vulnerability. It is possible to block the fragments on an intermediate router, if such exists, that should be placed between the affected Cisco 12000 and the final target. The intermediate router must not be another Cisco 12000 affected by the same vulnerability.
-
Each row of the table describes a release train and the platforms or products for which it is intended. If a given release train is vulnerable, then the earliest possible releases that contain the fix and the anticipated date of availability for each are listed in the "Rebuild", "Interim", and "Maintenance" columns. A device running any release in the given train that is earlier than the release in a specific column (less than the earliest fixed release) is known to be vulnerable, and it should be upgraded at least to the indicated release or a later version (greater than the earliest fixed release label).
When selecting a release, keep in mind the following definitions:
Maintenance
Most heavily tested and highly recommended release of any label in a given row of the table.
Rebuild
Constructed from the previous maintenance or major release in the same train, it contains the fix for a specific defect. Although it receives less testing, it contains only the minimal changes necessary to effect the repair.
Interim
Built at regular intervals between maintenance releases and receives less testing. Interim releases should be selected only if there is no other suitable release that addresses the vulnerability, and interim images should be upgraded to the next available maintenance release as soon as possible. Interim releases are not available via manufacturing, and usually they are not available for customer download from CCO without prior arrangement with the Cisco TAC.
In all cases, customers should exercise caution to be certain the devices to be upgraded contain sufficient memory and that current hardware and software configurations will continue to be supported properly by the new release. If the information is not clear, contact the Cisco TAC for assistance as shown in the following section.
More information on Cisco IOS software release names and abbreviations is available at http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/620/1.html.
Train
Description of Image or Platform
Availability of Fixed Releases*
Vulnerability CSCdm4476
Rebuild
Interim**
Maintenance
12.0S
Core/ISP support: GSR, RSP, c7200
12.0(10.1)S
12.0(11)S
Vulnerability CSCdu57417
Rebuild
Interim**
Maintenance
12.0S
Core/ISP support: GSR, RSP, c7200
12.0(19.3)S
12.0(19)S
12.0ST
Early deployment (ED) release for the Cisco 7200, 7500/7000RSP and 12000 series routers for Service Providers (ISPs).
12.0(18.6)ST1
12.0(19.3)ST
12.0(19)ST
Vulnerability CSCdu03323
Rebuild
Interim**
Maintenance
12.0S
Core/ISP support: GSR, RSP, c7200
12.0(16)S2
12.0(17.5)S
12.0(17)S
12.0ST
Early deployment (ED) release for the Cisco 7200, 7500/7000RSP and 12000 series routers for Service Providers (ISPs).
12.0(16.6)ST1
12.0(17.5)ST
12.0(17)ST
Vulnerability CSCdu35175
Rebuild
Interim**
Maintenance
12.0S
Core/ISP support: GSR, RSP, c7200
12.0(19.6)S
12.0ST
Early deployment (ED) release for the Cisco 7200, 7500/7000RSP and 12000 series routers for Service Providers (ISPs).
12.0(19.6)ST
Vulnerability CSCdt96370
Rebuild
Interim**
Maintenance
12.0S
Core/ISP support: GSR, RSP, c7200
12.0(16)S1
12.0(17.1)S
12.0(17)S
12.0ST
Cisco IOS software Release 12.OST is an early deployment (ED) release for the Cisco 7200, 7500/7000RSP and 12000 (GSR) series routers for Service Providers (ISPs).
12.0(15.6)ST3
12.0(17.1)ST
12.0(16)ST
Vulnerability CSCdt69741
Rebuild
Interim**
Maintenance
12.0S
Core/ISP support: GSR, RSP, c7200
12.0(16.6)S2
12.0(17.3)S
12.0(17)S
12.0ST
Cisco IOS software Release 12.OST is an early deployment (ED) release for the Cisco 7200, 7500/7000RSP and 12000 (GSR) series routers for Service Providers (ISPs).
12.0(17.3)ST
12.0(18)ST
Notes
* All dates are estimates and subject to change.
** Interim releases are subjected to less rigorous testing than regular maintenance releases, and may have serious bugs.
-
The Cisco PSIRT is not aware of any public announcements or malicious use of the vulnerabilities described in this advisory.
-
To learn about Cisco security vulnerability disclosure policies and publications, see the Security Vulnerability Policy. This document also contains instructions for obtaining fixed software and receiving security vulnerability information from Cisco.
-
Revision 1.1
2001-November-15
Update table with fixed IOS releases
Revision 1.0
2001-November-14
Initial public release
-
THIS DOCUMENT IS PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS" BASIS AND DOES NOT IMPLY ANY KIND OF GUARANTEE OR WARRANTY, INCLUDING THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR USE. YOUR USE OF THE INFORMATION ON THE DOCUMENT OR MATERIALS LINKED FROM THE DOCUMENT IS AT YOUR OWN RISK. CISCO RESERVES THE RIGHT TO CHANGE OR UPDATE THIS DOCUMENT AT ANY TIME.
A stand-alone copy or paraphrase of the text of this document that omits the distribution URL is an uncontrolled copy, and may lack important information or contain factual errors. The information in this document is intended for end-users of Cisco products.