NeuVector Enforcer is vulnerable to Command Injection and Buffer overflow
Critical severity
GitHub Reviewed
Published
Oct 21, 2025
in
neuvector/neuvector
•
Updated Oct 30, 2025
Package
Affected versions
>= 5.3.0, < 5.3.5
>= 5.4.0, <= 5.4.6
>= 0.0.0-20230727023453-1c4957d53911, < 0.0.0-20251020133207-084a437033b4
Patched versions
5.3.5
5.4.7
0.0.0-20251020133207-084a437033b4
Description
Published to the GitHub Advisory Database
Oct 21, 2025
Reviewed
Oct 21, 2025
Published by the National Vulnerability Database
Oct 30, 2025
Last updated
Oct 30, 2025
Impact
A vulnerability was identified in NeuVector, where the enforcer used environment variables
CLUSTER_RPC_PORTandCLUSTER_LAN_PORTto generate a command to be executed viapopen, without first sanitising their values.The entry process of the enforcer container is the monitor process. When the enforcer container stops, the monitor process checks whether the consul subprocess has exited. To perform this check, the monitor process uses the
popenfunction to execute a shell command that determines whether the ports used by the consul subprocess are still active.The values of environment variables
CLUSTER_RPC_PORTandCLUSTER_LAN_PORTare used directly to compose shell commands via popen without validation or sanitization. This behavior could allow a malicious user to inject malicious commands through these variables within the enforcer container.In the patched version, the monitor process validates the values of
CLUSTER_RPC_PORTandCLUSTER_LAN_PORTto ensure they contain only valid port numbers before invoking thepopencommand.If validation fails, the monitor process exits immediately, causing the enforcer container to terminate. This prevents the execution of any injected or malicious commands.
Patches
Patched versions include release
v5.4.7and above.Workarounds
There is no workaround for this issue. Users are recommended to upgrade, as soon as possible, to a version of NeuVector that contains the fix.
References
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References