Description
The software reads or writes to a buffer using an index or pointer that references a memory location after the end of the buffer.
This typically occurs when a pointer or its index is incremented to a position after the buffer; or when pointer arithmetic results in a position after the buffer.
Modes of Introduction:
Likelihood of Exploit:
Related Weaknesses
Consequences
Confidentiality: Read Memory
For an out-of-bounds read, the attacker may have access to sensitive information. If the sensitive information contains system details, such as the current buffers position in memory, this knowledge can be used to craft further attacks, possibly with more severe consequences.
Integrity, Availability: Modify Memory, DoS: Crash, Exit, or Restart
Out of bounds memory access will very likely result in the corruption of relevant memory, and perhaps instructions, possibly leading to a crash. Other attacks leading to lack of availability are possible, including putting the program into an infinite loop.
Integrity: Modify Memory, Execute Unauthorized Code or Commands
If the memory accessible by the attacker can be effectively controlled, it may be possible to execute arbitrary code, as with a standard buffer overflow. If the attacker can overwrite a pointer’s worth of memory (usually 32 or 64 bits), they can redirect a function pointer to their own malicious code. Even when the attacker can only modify a single byte arbitrary code execution can be possible. Sometimes this is because the same problem can be exploited repeatedly to the same effect. Other times it is because the attacker can overwrite security-critical application-specific data — such as a flag indicating whether the user is an administrator.
Potential Mitigations
CVE References
- CVE-2009-2550
- Classic stack-based buffer overflow in media player using a long entry in a playlist
- CVE-2009-2403
- Heap-based buffer overflow in media player using a long entry in a playlist
- CVE-2009-0689
- large precision value in a format string triggers overflow
- CVE-2009-0558
- attacker-controlled array index leads to code execution
- CVE-2008-4113
- OS kernel trusts userland-supplied length value, allowing reading of sensitive information
- CVE-2007-4268
- Chain: integer signedness error (CWE-195) passes signed comparison, leading to heap overflow (CWE-122)