Vulnerability Description
c-ares is an asynchronous resolver library. From 1.32.3 through 1.34.4, there is a use-after-free in read_answers() when process_answer() may re-enqueue a query either due to a DNS Cookie Failure or when the upstream server does not properly support EDNS, or possibly on TCP queries if the remote closed the connection immediately after a response. If there was an issue trying to put that new transaction on the wire, it would close the connection handle, but read_answers() was still expecting the connection handle to be available to possibly dequeue other responses. In theory a remote attacker might be able to trigger this by flooding the target with ICMP UNREACHABLE packets if they also control the upstream nameserver and can return a result with one of those conditions, this has been untested. Otherwise only a local attacker might be able to change system behavior to make send()/write() return a failure condition. This vulnerability is fixed in 1.34.5.
Related Weaknesses (CWE)
References
- https://github.com/c-ares/c-ares/commit/29d38719112639d8c0ba910254a3dd4f482ea2d1
- https://github.com/c-ares/c-ares/pull/821
- https://github.com/c-ares/c-ares/security/advisories/GHSA-6hxc-62jh-p29v
- http://www.openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2025/04/08/3
FAQ
What is CVE-2025-31498?
CVE-2025-31498 is a documented vulnerability. c-ares is an asynchronous resolver library. From 1.32.3 through 1.34.4, there is a use-after-free in read_answers() when process_answer() may re-enqueue a query either due to a DNS Cookie Failure or w...
How severe is CVE-2025-31498?
CVSS scoring is not yet available for CVE-2025-31498. Check NVD for updates.
Is there a patch for CVE-2025-31498?
Check the references section above for vendor advisories and patch information. Review vendor security bulletins for remediation guidance.