VMware fixed a flaw in vCenter Server discovered eight months ago
VMware addressed a high-severity privilege escalation flaw, tracked as CVE-2021-22048, in vCenter Server IWA mechanism.
VMware addressed a high-severity privilege escalation flaw, tracked as CVE-2021-22048 (CVSSv3 base score of 7.1.), in vCenter Server ‘s IWA (Integrated Windows Authentication) mechanism after eight months since its disclosure.
The vulnerability can be exploited by an attacker with non-administrative access to vulnerable vCenter Server deployments to elevate privileges to a higher privileged group.
“The vCenter Server contains a privilege escalation vulnerability in the IWA (Integrated Windows Authentication) authentication mechanism.” reads the advisory published by the company. “A malicious actor with non-administrative access to vCenter Server may exploit this issue to elevate privileges to a higher privileged group.”
The CVE-2021-22048 flaw affects multiple vCenter Server versions, including 6.5, 6.7, and 7.0. VMware addressed the flaw with the release of vCenter Server 7.0 Update 3fm which only addresses the vulnerability for servers running the latest release.
The company provided a workaround for this issue, suggesting switching to AD over LDAPS authentication OR Identity Provider Federation for AD FS (vSphere 7.0 only) from Integrated Windows Authentication (IWA).
The CVE-2021-22048 flaw was reported by CrowdStrike researchers Yaron Zinar and Sagi Sheinfeld on November 10th, 2021.
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Pierluigi Paganini
(SecurityAffairs – hacking, privilege escalation)
The post VMware fixed a flaw in vCenter Server discovered eight months ago appeared first on Security Affairs.
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