Huawei Campus S3700HI with software V200R001C00SPC300; Campus S5700 with software V200R002C00SPC100; Campus S7700 with software V200R003C00SPC300,V200R003C00SPC500; LSW S9700 with software V200R001C00SPC300,V200R003C00SPC300,V200R003C00SPC500; S2350 with software V200R003C00SPC300; S2750 with software V200R003C00SPC300; S5300 with software V200R001C00SPC300,V200R002C00SPC100,V200R003C00SPC300; S5700 with software V200R001C00SPC300,V200R003C00SPC300; S6300 with software V200R001C00SPC300,V200R002C00SPC100,V200R003C00SPC300; S6700 S3300HI with software V200R001C00SPC300,V200R002C00SPC100,V200R003C00SPC300; S7700 with software V200R001C00SPC300; S9300 with software V200R001C00SPC300,V200R003C00SPC300,V200R003C00SPC500; S9300E with software V200R003C00SPC300,V200R003C00SPC500 allow attackers to keep sending malformed packets to cause a denial of service (DoS) attack, aka a heap overflow.
Huawei AC6605 with software V200R001C00; AC6605 with software V200R002C00; ACU with software V200R001C00; ACU with software V200R002C00; S2300, S3300, S2700, S3700 with software V100R006C05 and earlier versions; S5300, S5700, S6300, S6700 with software V100R006, V200R001, V200R002, V200R003, V200R005C00SPC300 and earlier versions; S7700, S9300, S9300E, S9700 with software V100R006, V200R001, V200R002, V200R003, V200R005C00SPC300 and earlier versions could allow remote attackers to send a special SSH packet to the VRP device to cause a denial of service.
Huawei switches S5700, S6700, S7700, S9700 with software V200R001C00SPC300, V200R002C00SPC100, V200R003C00SPC300, V200R005C00SPC500, V200R006C00; S12700 with software V200R005C00SPC500, V200R006C00; ACU2 with software V200R005C00SPC500, V200R006C00 have a permission control vulnerability. If a switch enables Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting (AAA) for permission control and user permissions are not appropriate, AAA users may obtain the virtual type terminal (VTY) access permission, resulting in privilege escalation.
Memory leak in Huawei S9300, S5300, S5700, S6700, S7700, S9700, and S12700 devices allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (memory consumption and restart) via a large number of malformed packets.
The RC4 algorithm, as used in the TLS protocol and SSL protocol, does not properly combine state data with key data during the initialization phase, which makes it easier for remote attackers to conduct plaintext-recovery attacks against the initial bytes of a stream by sniffing network traffic that occasionally relies on keys affected by the Invariance Weakness, and then using a brute-force approach involving LSB values, aka the "Bar Mitzvah" issue.