A vulnerability in the CLI command-parsing code of Cisco Meeting Server could allow an authenticated, local attacker to perform command injection and escalate their privileges to root. The attacker must first authenticate to the application with valid administrator credentials. The vulnerability is due to insufficient validation of user-supplied input at the CLI for certain commands. An attacker could exploit this vulnerability by authenticating to the affected application and submitting a crafted CLI command for execution at the Cisco Meeting Server CLI. An exploit could allow the attacker to perform command injection and escalate their privilege level to root. Vulnerable Products: This vulnerability exists in Cisco Meeting Server software versions prior to and including 2.0, 2.1, and 2.2. Cisco Bug IDs: CSCvf53830.
The product receives input or data, but it does not validate or incorrectly validates that the input has the properties that are required to process the data safely and correctly.
Name | Vendor | Start Version | End Version |
---|---|---|---|
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.0 (including) | 2.0.0 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.1 (including) | 2.0.1 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.2 (including) | 2.0.2 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.3 (including) | 2.0.3 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.4 (including) | 2.0.4 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.5 (including) | 2.0.5 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.6 (including) | 2.0.6 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.7 (including) | 2.0.7 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.8 (including) | 2.0.8 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.9 (including) | 2.0.9 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.10 (including) | 2.0.10 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.11 (including) | 2.0.11 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.12 (including) | 2.0.12 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.13 (including) | 2.0.13 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.14 (including) | 2.0.14 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.15 (including) | 2.0.15 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.0.16 (including) | 2.0.16 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.0 (including) | 2.1.0 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.1 (including) | 2.1.1 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.2 (including) | 2.1.2 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.3 (including) | 2.1.3 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.4 (including) | 2.1.4 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.5 (including) | 2.1.5 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.6 (including) | 2.1.6 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.7 (including) | 2.1.7 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.8 (including) | 2.1.8 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.9 (including) | 2.1.9 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.10 (including) | 2.1.10 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.1.11 (including) | 2.1.11 (including) |
Meeting_server | Cisco | 2.2.0 (including) | 2.2.0 (including) |
Input validation is a frequently-used technique for checking potentially dangerous inputs in order to ensure that the inputs are safe for processing within the code, or when communicating with other components. Input can consist of:
Data can be simple or structured. Structured data can be composed of many nested layers, composed of combinations of metadata and raw data, with other simple or structured data. Many properties of raw data or metadata may need to be validated upon entry into the code, such as:
Implied or derived properties of data must often be calculated or inferred by the code itself. Errors in deriving properties may be considered a contributing factor to improper input validation.