2 advisories tracked · Splunk (prodsec@splunk.com CNA) via NVD · checked automatically every minute
Pick your product and enter the exact software release it runs. We match it against the affected/fixed versions in Splunk's recent advisories.
Splunk (prodsec@splunk.com CNA) via NVD
Splunk is its own CVE Numbering Authority. VulniPulse ingests Splunk's CVEs from the NVD CNA feed (prodsec@splunk.com), each linking to its SVD-YYYY-NNNN advisory on advisory.splunk.com. Covers Splunk Enterprise, Splunk Cloud Platform, the Universal Forwarder, IT Service Intelligence (ITSI), SOAR, Enterprise Security and Splunk apps/add-ons — the SIEM at the centre of most SOCs, so a security-team audience that patches on advisory day.
Visit Splunk security advisoriesIn Splunk IT Service Intelligence (ITSI) versions below below 4.13.3, 4.15.3, or 4.17.1, a malicious actor can inject American National Standards Institute (ANSI) escape codes into Splunk ITSI log files that, when a vulnerable terminal application reads them, can run malicious code in the vulnerable application. This attack requires a user to use a terminal application that translates ANSI escape codes to read the malicious log file locally in the vulnerable terminal. The vulnerability also requires additional user interaction to succeed. The vulnerability does not directly affect Splunk ITSI. The indirect impact on Splunk ITSI can vary significantly depending on the permissions in the vulnerable terminal application, as well as where and how the user reads the malicious log file. For example, users can copy the malicious file from Splunk ITSI and read it on their local machine.
Splunk SOAR versions lower than 6.1.0 are indirectly affected by a potential vulnerability accessed through the user’s terminal. A third party can send Splunk SOAR a maliciously crafted web request containing special ANSI characters to cause log file poisoning. When a terminal user attempts to view the poisoned logs, this can tamper with the terminal and cause possible malicious code execution from the terminal user’s action.