SonicWall Recommends Immediate Firmware Upgrade to Fix Critical Flaws in SMA 100 Series Appliances

By | December 9, 2021

SonicWall has released new firmware for its Secure Mobile Access (SMA) 100 series remote access appliances that fixes 8 vulnerabilities including 2 critical and 4 high-severity flaws.

Vulnerabilities in SonicWall appliances are attractive to threat actors and have been targeted in the past in ransomware attacks. While there are currently no known cases of the latest batch of vulnerabilities being exploited in the wild, there is a high risk of these vulnerabilities being exploited if the firmware is not updated promptly. SMA 100 series appliances include the SonicWall SMA 200, 210, 400, 410, and 500v secure access gateway products, all of which are affected.

The most serious vulnerabilities are buffer overflow issues which could be exploited remotely by an unauthenticated attacker to execute code on vulnerable appliances. These are CVE-2021-20038, an unauthenticated stack-based buffer overflow vulnerability (CVSS score of 9.8), and CVE-2021-20045, which covers multiple unauthenticated file explorer heap-based and stack-based buffer overflow issues (CVSS score 9.4). A further heap-based buffer overflow vulnerability – CVE-2021-20043 – allows remote code execution, although an attacker would need to be authenticated (CVSS score 8.8).

The remaining 3 high-severity vulnerabilities are CVE-2021-20041 – an unauthenticated CPU exhaustion vulnerability (CVSS score 7.5); CVE-2021-20039 – an authenticated command injection vulnerability (CVSS score 7.2); and CVE-2021-20044 – a post-authentication remote code execution vulnerability (CVSS score 7.2).

Two medium-severity vulnerabilities have also been fixed: CVE-2021-20040 – an unauthenticated file upload path traversal vulnerability (CVSS score 6.5) and CVE-2021-20042 – an unauthenticated ‘confused deputy’ vulnerability (CVSS score 6.3).

The firmware update can be accessed at MySonicWall.com and should be applied as soon as possible to prevent exploitation. SonicWall says there are no temporary mitigations that can be implemented to prevent exploitation of the flaws.

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