VYPR
Unrated severityNVD Advisory· Published Oct 15, 2025· Updated Apr 15, 2026

CVE-2025-39985

CVE-2025-39985

Description

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

can: mcba_usb: populate ndo_change_mtu() to prevent buffer overflow

Sending an PF_PACKET allows to bypass the CAN framework logic and to directly reach the xmit() function of a CAN driver. The only check which is performed by the PF_PACKET framework is to make sure that skb->len fits the interface's MTU.

Unfortunately, because the mcba_usb driver does not populate its net_device_ops->ndo_change_mtu(), it is possible for an attacker to configure an invalid MTU by doing, for example:

$ ip link set can0 mtu 9999

After doing so, the attacker could open a PF_PACKET socket using the ETH_P_CANXL protocol:

socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_RAW, htons(ETH_P_CANXL))

to inject a malicious CAN XL frames. For example:

struct canxl_frame frame = { .flags = 0xff, .len = 2048, };

The CAN drivers' xmit() function are calling can_dev_dropped_skb() to check that the skb is valid, unfortunately under above conditions, the malicious packet is able to go through can_dev_dropped_skb() checks:

1. the skb->protocol is set to ETH_P_CANXL which is valid (the function does not check the actual device capabilities).

  1. the length is a valid CAN XL length.

And so, mcba_usb_start_xmit() receives a CAN XL frame which it is not able to correctly handle and will thus misinterpret it as a CAN frame.

This can result in a buffer overflow. The driver will consume cf->len as-is with no further checks on these lines:

usb_msg.dlc = cf->len;

memcpy(usb_msg.data, cf->data, usb_msg.dlc);

Here, cf->len corresponds to the flags field of the CAN XL frame. In our previous example, we set canxl_frame->flags to 0xff. Because the maximum expected length is 8, a buffer overflow of 247 bytes occurs!

Populate net_device_ops->ndo_change_mtu() to ensure that the interface's MTU can not be set to anything bigger than CAN_MTU. By fixing the root cause, this prevents the buffer overflow.

AI Insight

LLM-synthesized narrative grounded in this CVE's description and references.

Missing ndo_change_mtu() in mcba_usb driver allows setting an invalid MTU, enabling a buffer overflow via crafted CAN XL frames.

Vulnerability

In the Linux kernel's mcba_usb CAN driver, the net_device_ops structure does not populate the ndo_change_mtu() callback. This omission allows an attacker to configure an arbitrarily large MTU on the CAN interface (e.g., ip link set can0 mtu 9999). The PF_PACKET socket framework only checks that the socket buffer length fits the interface's MTU, so a large MTU bypasses the usual CAN frame size validation [1].

Exploitation

An attacker with local access can open a PF_PACKET socket using the ETH_P_CANXL protocol and inject a malicious CAN XL frame. The driver's mcba_usb_start_xmit() function receives this frame and misinterprets it as a standard CAN frame. Specifically, the cf->len field (which in a CAN XL frame corresponds to the flags field) is used directly as the data length in a memcpy operation without bounds checking. For example, setting flags to 0xff causes a buffer overflow of 247 bytes because the driver expects a maximum length of 8 [1].

Impact

Successful exploitation results in a buffer overflow on the heap, which can corrupt adjacent memory and potentially lead to arbitrary code execution or a system crash. The vulnerability is triggered from user space with no special privileges beyond the ability to configure network interfaces and send raw packets [1].

Mitigation

The fix populates ndo_change_mtu() to enforce a maximum MTU of CAN_MTU, preventing the configuration of oversized MTUs. This addresses the root cause by ensuring that the PF_PACKET layer's MTU check correctly limits frame sizes before they reach the driver. The patch has been applied to the stable kernel tree [1].

AI Insight generated on May 19, 2026. Synthesized from this CVE's description and the cited reference URLs; citations are validated against the source bundle.

Affected products

2

Patches

8

Vulnerability mechanics

Generated on May 9, 2026. Inputs: CWE entries + fix-commit diffs from this CVE's patches. Citations validated against bundle.

References

8

News mentions

0

No linked articles in our index yet.