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Code Execution Bug In Broadcom Wi-Fi Driver

2U*U2 writes to mention an EWeek article about an entry in the Month of Kernel Bugs. John Ellch has discovered a critical vulnerability in the Broadcom wireless driver: a driver used in machines from HP, Dell, Gateway, and eMachines. From the article: "[The bug] is a stack-based buffer overflow in the Broadcom BCMWL5.SYS wireless device driver that could be exploited by attackers to take complete control of a Wi-Fi-enabled laptop. The vulnerability is caused by improper handling of 802.11 probe responses containing a long SSID field and can lead to arbitrary kernel-mode code execution. The volunteer ZERT (Zero Day Emergency Response Team) warns that the flaw could be exploited wirelessly if a vulnerable machine is within range of the attacker."

5 of 157 comments (clear)

  1. But which OS!? by Idaho · · Score: 4, Informative

    I mean, it's bad enough that people always talk about "Computer viruses" instead of "Windows viruses" and so on, but come on, can we please include *some* information in the post itself?

    Admittedly, the article to which this newspost links also doesn't mention this until the third or fourth paragraph or so.

    At first I thought the article was about the Linux kernel, in that case I would have wanted a (global) list of the OS's/versions affected as well, because my laptop might have been vulnerable in that case!

    So, I assume it's just Windows XP SP2 (and probably older SP's), or other versions as well?

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  2. Re:NDISWrapper by ettlz · · Score: 5, Informative
    Broadcom users on Linux should really be using the bcm43xx kernel module by now.
    Anyway the flaw wouldnt affect Linux systems. Why? Different kernel.
    NDISWrapper executes the Windows Kernel Mode NDIS driver in the Linux kernel's address space. So it might still result in code injection. It might even extend to FreeBSD when running bcmwl5.sys under its equivalent as well.
  3. More details at... by Wanker · · Score: 5, Informative
  4. Workaround for non-Linksys devices by Jacco+de+Leeuw · · Score: 5, Informative

    George Ou at ZDNet has published a procedure on how to use the Linksys drivers with devices from other vendors such as Dell and HP. Of course this is not an ideal solution but if it works it's better than nothing.

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  5. Puh-lease. by Inoshiro · · Score: 4, Informative

    We've come a long way in the past 30 years in compiler theory and language design. We can do better than C without losing speed. Or even use a whole OS in a restricted language. You can do compile-time checking of your pointers, as Spin proves.

    C is, essentially, portable assembly language. I love it -- it's one of the languages I know the best, and I continue to work in it. However, I'd love to see the use of Cyclone or special compile-time checked languages for the essentials. I think most device drivers could be easily rewritten to be bullet-proof (stack overflow) this way, and such languages are easier to do state machine analysis on (since most device drivers are simple pieces of software that control the state of the hardware). Provably correct operating system design is not a theory, but no one seems to be interested.

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