Net::CIDR::Lite versions before 0.23 for Perl mishandles IPv4 mapped IPv6 addresses, which may allow IP ACL bypass. _pack_ipv6() includes the sentinel byte from _pack_ipv4() when building the packed representation of IPv4 mapped addresses like ::ffff:192.168.1.1. This produces an 18 byte value instead of 17 bytes, misaligning the IPv4 part of the address. The wrong length causes incorrect results in mask operations (bitwise AND truncates to the shorter operand) and in find() / bin_find() which use Perl string comparison (lt/gt). This can cause find() to incorrectly match or miss addresses. Example: my $cidr = Net::CIDR::Lite->new("::ffff:192.168.1.0/120"); $cidr->find("::ffff:192.168.2.0"); # incorrectly returns true This is triggered by valid RFC 4291 IPv4 mapped addresses (::ffff:x.x.x.x). See also CVE-2026-40198, a related issue in the same function affecting malformed IPv6 addresses.
| Vendor | Product | Versions |
|---|---|---|
| stigtsp | net::cidr::lite | 0, before 0.23 |
Updated severity to CRITICAL and noted that no exploit exists while the vulnerability is actively exploited.
The article provides a more detailed description of the vulnerability, including the specific function (_pack_ipv6) and the misaligned byte issue. It also clarifies the vendor as 'stigtsp', the product as 'Net-CIDR-Lite', and specifies affected versions as 'before 0.23'. The severity is noted as 'NONE', exploit availability as false, actively exploited as false, and patch availability as '0.23'. No CVSS score, IOCs, MITRE ATT&CK techniques, or tags are mentioned.
Initial creation