| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| When SmartStart Inclusion fails during the onboarding of a Z-Wave PIR sensor, the sensor will join the network as a non-secure device. This vulnerability exists in Silicon Labs' Z-Wave PIR Sensor Reference design delivered as part of SiSDK v2025.6.0 and v2025.6.1. |
| An integer underflow vulnerability in the Silicon Labs Z-Wave Protocol Controller can lead to out of bounds memory reads. |
| The vulnerability described by CVE-2023-0972 has been additionally discovered in Silicon Labs Z-Wave end devices. This vulnerability may allow an unauthenticated attacker within Z-Wave range to overflow a stack buffer, leading to arbitrary code execution. |
| After receiving a
malformed 802.15.4 MAC Data Request
the Zigbee Coordinator sends a ‘network leave’ request to Zigbee router resulting in the Zigbee Router getting stuck in a non-rejoinable state. If a suitable parent is not available, the end devices will be unable to rejoin. A manual recommissioning is required to recover the Zigbee Router. |
| A bug in Micrium OS Network HTTP Server permits an invalid pointer dereference during header processing - potentially allowing a device crash and Denial of Service. |
| When a WF200/WGM160P device is configured to operate as an Access Point, it may be vulnerable to a denial of service triggered by a malformed packet. The device may recover automatically or require a hard reset. |
| An integer underflow vulnerability is present in Silicon Lab’s implementation of PSA Crypto and SE Manager EC-JPAKE APIs during ZKP parsing. Triggering the underflow can lead to a hard fault, causing a temporary denial of service. |
| The Simplicity Device Manager Tool has a Reflected XSS (Cross-site-scripting) vulnerability in several API endpoints. The attacker needs to be on the same network to execute this attack. These APIs can affect confidentiality, integrity, and availability of the system that has Simplicity Device Manager tool running in the background. |
| A Zigbee Radio Co-Processor (RCP), which is using SiLabs EmberZNet Zigbee stack, was unable to send messages to the host system (CPCd) due to heavy Zigbee traffic, resulting in a Denial of Service (DoS) attack, Only hard reset will bring the device to normal operation |
| DPA countermeasures in Silicon Labs' Series 2 devices are not reseeded under certain conditions.
This may allow an attacker to eventually extract secret keys through a DPA attack. |
| Malformed Device Reset Locally command classes can be sent to temporarily deny service to an end device. Any frames sent by the end device will not be acknowledged by the gateway during this time. |
| The Ember ZNet stack’s packet buffer manager may read out of bound memory leading to an assert, causing a Denial of Service (DoS). |
| The web interface of the Silicon Labs Simplicity Device Manager is exposed publicly and can be used to extract the NTLMv2 hash which an attacker could use to crack the user's domain password. |
| In a
Silicon Labs multi-protocol gateway, a corrupt pointer to buffered data on a multi-protocol radio co-processor (RCP) causes the OpenThread Border Router(OTBR) application task running on the host platform to crash, allowing an attacker to cause a temporary denial-of-service. |
| An integer underflow vulnerability in Silicon Labs Secure NCP host implementation allows a buffer overread via a specially crafted packet. |
| Due to improper input validation, a buffer overflow vulnerability is present in
Zigbee EZSP Host Applications. If the buffer overflows, stack corruption is possible. In certain
conditions, this could lead to arbitrary code execution. Access to a network key is required to exploit this vulnerability. |
| Wi-SUN unexpected 4- Way Handshake packet receptions may lead to predictable keys and potentially leading to Man in the middle (MitM) attack |
| Vulnerable endpoints accept user-controlled input through a URL in JSON format which enables command execution. The commands allowed to execute can open executables. However, the commands cannot pass parameters or arguments.
To successfully execute this attack, the attacker needs to be on the same network. |
| A truncated 802.15.4 packet can lead to an assert, resulting in a denial of service. |
| A memory corruption vulnerability exists in the HTTP Server Host header parsing functionality of Weston Embedded uC-HTTP v3.01.01. A specially crafted network packet can lead to code execution. An attacker can send a malicious packet to trigger this vulnerability. |