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Linux EUVD-2026-32778

| CVE-2026-46151
2026-05-28 416baaa9-dc9f-4396-8d5f-8c081fb06d67 GHSA-589q-vfc2-j9cg

Lifecycle Timeline

2
Patch available
May 28, 2026 - 12:01 EUVD
CVE Published
May 28, 2026 - 10:16 nvd
UNKNOWN (no severity yet)

DescriptionNVD

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:

usb: usblp: fix heap leak in IEEE 1284 device ID via short response

usblp_ctrl_msg() collapses the usb_control_msg() return value to 0/-errno, discarding the actual number of bytes transferred. A broken printer can complete the GET_DEVICE_ID control transfer short and the driver has no way to know.

usblp_cache_device_id_string() reads the 2-byte big-endian length prefix from the response and trusts it (clamped only to the buffer bounds). The buffer is kmalloc(1024) at probe time. A device that sends exactly two bytes (e.g. 0x03 0xFF, claiming a 1023-byte ID) leaves device_id_string[2..1022] holding stale kmalloc heap.

That stale data is then exposed:

  • via the ieee1284_id sysfs attribute (sprintf("%s", buf+2), truncated

at the first NUL in the stale heap), and

  • via the IOCNR_GET_DEVICE_ID ioctl, which copy_to_user()s the full

claimed length regardless of NULs, up to 1021 bytes of uninitialized heap, with the leak size chosen by the device.

Fix this up by just zapping the buffer with zeros before each request sent to the device.

Analysis

In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: usb: usblp: fix heap leak in IEEE 1284 device ID via short response usblp_ctrl_msg() collapses the usb_control_msg() return value to 0/-errno, discarding the actual number of bytes transferred. A broken printer can complete the GET_DEVICE_ID control transfer short and the driver has no way to know. …

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EUVD-2026-32778 vulnerability details – vuln.today

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