DIR-605L 2.13B01 POST RF Buffer Overflow in formSetMACFilter
CVE-2026-5980 Published on April 9, 2026

D-Link DIR-605L POST Request formSetMACFilter buffer overflow
A flaw has been found in D-Link DIR-605L 2.13B01. Affected by this issue is the function formSetMACFilter of the file /goform/formSetMACFilter of the component POST Request Handler. This manipulation of the argument curTime causes buffer overflow. The attack may be initiated remotely. The exploit has been published and may be used. This vulnerability only affects products that are no longer supported by the maintainer.

NVD

Timeline

Advisory disclosed

VulDB entry created

VulDB entry last update

Weakness Types

What is a Classic Buffer Overflow Vulnerability?

The program copies an input buffer to an output buffer without verifying that the size of the input buffer is less than the size of the output buffer, leading to a buffer overflow. A buffer overflow condition exists when a program attempts to put more data in a buffer than it can hold, or when a program attempts to put data in a memory area outside of the boundaries of a buffer. The simplest type of error, and the most common cause of buffer overflows, is the "classic" case in which the program copies the buffer without restricting how much is copied. Other variants exist, but the existence of a classic overflow strongly suggests that the programmer is not considering even the most basic of security protections.

CVE-2026-5980 has been classified to as a Classic Buffer Overflow vulnerability or weakness.

What is a Buffer Overflow Vulnerability?

The software performs operations on a memory buffer, but it can read from or write to a memory location that is outside of the intended boundary of the buffer.

CVE-2026-5980 has been classified to as a Buffer Overflow vulnerability or weakness.


Affected Versions

D-Link DIR-605L Version 2.13B01 is affected by CVE-2026-5980

Exploit Probability

EPSS
0.05%
Percentile
13.51%

EPSS (Exploit Prediction Scoring System) scores estimate the probability that a vulnerability will be exploited in the wild within the next 30 days. The percentile shows you how this score compares to all other vulnerabilities.