Honeywell Experion PKS Safety Manager 5.02 uses Hard-coded Credentials. According to FSCT-2022-0052, there is a Honeywell Experion PKS Safety Manager hardcoded credentials issue. The affected components are characterized as: POLO bootloader. The potential impact is: Manipulate firmware. The Honeywell Experion PKS Safety Manager utilizes the DCOM-232/485 serial interface for firmware management purposes. When booting, the Safety Manager exposes the Enea POLO bootloader via this interface. Access to the boot configuration is controlled by means of credentials hardcoded in the Safety Manager firmware. The credentials for the bootloader are hardcoded in the firmware. An attacker with access to the serial interface (either through physical access, a compromised EWS or an exposed serial-to-ethernet gateway) can utilize these credentials to control the boot process and manipulate the unauthenticated firmware image (see FSCT-2022-0054).
References
Link | Resource |
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https://www.cisa.gov/uscert/ics/advisories/icsa-22-207-02 | Mitigation Third Party Advisory US Government Resource |
https://www.forescout.com/blog/ | Third Party Advisory |
Configurations
Configuration 1 (hide)
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History
No history.
Information
Published : 2022-07-28 16:15
Updated : 2024-02-28 19:29
NVD link : CVE-2022-30314
Mitre link : CVE-2022-30314
CVE.ORG link : CVE-2022-30314
JSON object : View
Products Affected
honeywell
- safety_manager_firmware
- safety_manager
CWE
CWE-798
Use of Hard-coded Credentials