Aruba and Avaya network switches are vulnerable to RCE attacks
By Bill Toulas, Bleeping Computer
Security researchers have discovered five vulnerabilities in network equipment from Aruba (owned by HP) and Avaya (owned by ExtremeNetworks), that could allow malicious actors to execute code remotely on the devices.
The damage caused by a successful attack ranges from data breach and complete device takeover to lateral movement and overriding network segmentation defenses.
Security researchers from Armis cybersecurity company specialized on connected devices dubbed the vulnerability set “TLStorm 2.0” as the discovery is in the same class of issues as the of misuse of the NanoSSL TLS library, which they reported on popular APC UPS models.
The analysts found that devices from other vendors have identical security risks and provided a list of affected products:
- Avaya ERS3500
- Avaya ERS3600
- Avaya ERS4900
- Avaya ERS5900
- Aruba 5400R Series
- Aruba 3810 Series
- Aruba 2920 Series
- Aruba 2930F Series
- Aruba 2930M Series
- Aruba 2530 Series
- Aruba 2540 Series
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