CVE record
CVE-2026-31411
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: net: atm: fix crash due to unvalidated vcc pointer in sigd_send() Reproducer available at [1]. The ATM send path (sendmsg -> vcc_sendmsg -> sigd_send) reads the vcc pointer from msg->vcc and uses it directly without any validation. This pointer comes from userspace via sendmsg() and can be arbitrarily forged: int fd = socket(AF_ATMSVC, SOCK_DGRAM, 0); ioctl(fd, ATMSIGD_CTRL); // become ATM signaling daemon struct msghdr msg = { .msg_iov = &iov, ... }; *(unsigned long *)(buf + 4) = 0xdeadbeef; // fake vcc pointer sendmsg(fd, &msg, 0); // kernel dereferences 0xdeadbeef In normal operation, the kernel sends the vcc pointer to the signaling daemon via sigd_enq() when processing operations like connect(), bind(), or listen(). The daemon is expected to return the same pointer when responding. However, a malicious daemon can send arbitrary pointer values. Fix this by introducing find_get_vcc() which validates the pointer by searching through vcc_hash (similar to how sigd_close() iterates over all VCCs), and acquires a reference via sock_hold() if found. Since struct atm_vcc embeds struct sock as its first member, they share the same lifetime. Therefore using sock_hold/sock_put is sufficient to keep the vcc alive while it is being used. Note that there may be a race with sigd_close() which could mark the vcc with various flags (e.g., ATM_VF_RELEASED) after find_get_vcc() returns. However, sock_hold() guarantees the memory remains valid, so this race only affects the logical state, not memory safety. [1]: https://gist.github.com/mrpre/1ba5949c45529c511152e2f4c755b0f3
Amazon picks for vulnerability response
Product discovery links are localized to Amazon US when country data is available.
This page may contain affiliate links. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Hardware security keys
Physical MFA keys for admin accounts, cloud consoles, password managers, and incident response workflows.
Security engineering books
Books on secure design, incident response, threat modeling, cloud security, and practical defense.
Ethernet cable testers
Portable testers for validating office, rack, home lab, and troubleshooting cable runs.
Vulnerability metadata
- Published
- 2026-04-08T08:46:27.977Z
- Modified
- 2026-05-20T10:33:38.647Z
- EPSS
- Not available
- Vector
- CVSS:3.1/AV:L/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H
Recommended platforms
Affiliate-supported recommendations for CVE-2026-31411 vulnerability response.
This page may contain affiliate links. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Security engineering books
Browse practical security, incident response, cloud security, and secure coding books for team learning.
Cloud security platform
Continuously review cloud posture, exposed services, identity risks, and misconfigurations.
Monitoring and incident response
Track uptime, logs, traces, TLS expiry, API latency, and production security signals.