First published: Fri Aug 09 2013(Updated: )
Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories (SEL) SEL-2241, SEL-3505, and SEL-3530 RTAC master devices allow physically proximate attackers to cause a denial of service (infinite loop) via crafted input over a serial line.
Credit: ics-cert@hq.dhs.gov
Affected Software | Affected Version | How to fix |
---|---|---|
Selinc Sel-2241 RTAC Module Firmware | =r113-v0-z001001-d20110721 | |
Selinc Sel-2241 RTAC Module Firmware | =r123-v0-z002001-d20130117 | |
SEL-3505 Firmware | =r119-v0-z001001-d20120720 | |
SEL-3505 Firmware | =r123-v0-z002001-d20130117 | |
Selinc Sel-3530 Firmware | =r100_-v0-z001001-d20090915 | |
Selinc Sel-3530 Firmware | =r123-v0-z002001 | |
SEL-3530-4 | =r107-v0-z001001-d20100818 | |
SEL-3530-4 | =r123-v0-z002001-d20130117 |
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CVE-2013-2798 is classified as a medium severity vulnerability that can lead to a denial of service.
To address CVE-2013-2798, update the affected SEL devices to the latest firmware version provided by Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories.
CVE-2013-2798 affects SEL-2241, SEL-3505, and SEL-3530 RTAC master devices.
CVE-2013-2798 allows physically proximate attackers to exploit the vulnerability and cause an infinite loop denial of service.
Yes, exploiting CVE-2013-2798 requires physical proximity to the affected devices.