CVE Vulnerabilities

CVE-2024-45844

Missing Authentication for Critical Function

Published: Oct 16, 2024 | Modified: Oct 21, 2025
CVSS 3.x
N/A
Source:
NVD
CVSS 2.x
RedHat/V2
RedHat/V3
Ubuntu

BIG-IP monitor functionality may allow an attacker to bypass access control restrictions, regardless of the port lockdown settings.  Note: Software versions which have reached End of Technical Support (EoTS) are not evaluated.

Weakness

The product does not perform any authentication for functionality that requires a provable user identity or consumes a significant amount of resources.

Affected Software

Name Vendor Start Version End Version
Big-ip_access_policy_manager F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_advanced_firewall_manager F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_advanced_web_application_firewall F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_analytics F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_application_acceleration_manager F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_application_security_manager F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_application_visibility_and_reporting F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_automation_toolchain F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_carrier-grade_nat F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_container_ingress_services F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_ddos_hybrid_defender F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_domain_name_system F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_edge_gateway F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_fraud_protection_service F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_global_traffic_manager F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_link_controller F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_local_traffic_manager F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_policy_enforcement_manager F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_ssl_orchestrator F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_webaccelerator F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)
Big-ip_websafe F5 15.1.0 (including) 15.1.10.5 (excluding)

Potential Mitigations

  • Divide the software into anonymous, normal, privileged, and administrative areas. Identify which of these areas require a proven user identity, and use a centralized authentication capability.
  • Identify all potential communication channels, or other means of interaction with the software, to ensure that all channels are appropriately protected, including those channels that are assumed to be accessible only by authorized parties. Developers sometimes perform authentication at the primary channel, but open up a secondary channel that is assumed to be private. For example, a login mechanism may be listening on one network port, but after successful authentication, it may open up a second port where it waits for the connection, but avoids authentication because it assumes that only the authenticated party will connect to the port.
  • In general, if the software or protocol allows a single session or user state to persist across multiple connections or channels, authentication and appropriate credential management need to be used throughout.
  • Where possible, avoid implementing custom, “grow-your-own” authentication routines and consider using authentication capabilities as provided by the surrounding framework, operating system, or environment. These capabilities may avoid common weaknesses that are unique to authentication; support automatic auditing and tracking; and make it easier to provide a clear separation between authentication tasks and authorization tasks.
  • In environments such as the World Wide Web, the line between authentication and authorization is sometimes blurred. If custom authentication routines are required instead of those provided by the server, then these routines must be applied to every single page, since these pages could be requested directly.
  • Use a vetted library or framework that does not allow this weakness to occur or provides constructs that make this weakness easier to avoid.
  • For example, consider using libraries with authentication capabilities such as OpenSSL or the ESAPI Authenticator [REF-45].

References