Ameeba Exploit Tracker

Tracking CVEs, exploits, and zero-days for defensive cybersecurity research.

Ameeba Blog Search
TRENDING · 1 WEEK
Attack Vector
Vendor
Severity

CVE-2025-32400: Heap-Based Buffer Overflow Vulnerability in RT-Labs P-Net v1.0.1 or earlier

Ameeba Chat Store screens
Download Ameeba Chat

Overview

The CVE-2025-32400 is a critical vulnerability discovered in RT-Labs P-Net version 1.0.1 or earlier. This vulnerability exposes IO devices that use the library to potential system compromise or data leakage. The vulnerability lies in a heap-based buffer overflow that can be triggered by sending a malicious RPC packet. This vulnerability matters because it can allow an attacker to crash IO devices, potentially leading to data leakage or system compromise.

Vulnerability Summary

CVE ID: CVE-2025-32400
Severity: High (CVSS: 7.5)
Attack Vector: Network
Privileges Required: None
User Interaction: None
Impact: Potential system compromise or data leakage

Affected Products

Ameeba Chat Icon Escape the Surveillance Era

Most apps won’t tell you the truth.
They’re part of the problem.

Phone numbers. Emails. Profiles. Logs.
It’s all fuel for surveillance.

Ameeba Chat gives you a way out.

  • • No phone number
  • • No email
  • • No personal info
  • • Anonymous aliases
  • • End-to-end encrypted

Chat without a trace.

Product | Affected Versions

RT-Labs P-Net | v1.0.1 or earlier

How the Exploit Works

The exploit works by an attacker crafting a malicious Remote Procedure Call (RPC) packet and sending it to the P-Net network. The malicious packet can cause a heap-based buffer overflow in the P-Net library, causing a crash in IO devices using the library. By choosing the right data to overflow the buffer, an attacker could potentially gain control over the system or cause data leakage.

Conceptual Example Code

This is a conceptual example and does not represent an actual exploit code. It shows how a malicious RPC packet might be constructed and sent to a vulnerable device.

POST /rpc/pnet HTTP/1.1
Host: target.example.com
Content-Type: application/octet-stream
{ "rpc_call": "overflow",
"data": "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA..."}

In this example, the “data” field contains an excessively long string of “A”s, intended to overflow the buffer in the P-Net library and cause a crash. An actual exploit would use carefully crafted data to try to take control of the system or leak data.
In mitigation, vendors should apply patches as provided by RT-Labs. In the absence of a patch, using a Web Application Firewall (WAF) or Intrusion Detection System (IDS) can serve as a temporary mitigation against the exploit.

Want to discuss this further? Join the Ameeba Cybersecurity Group Chat.

Disclaimer:

The information and code presented in this article are provided for educational and defensive cybersecurity purposes only. Any conceptual or pseudocode examples are simplified representations intended to raise awareness and promote secure development and system configuration practices.

Do not use this information to attempt unauthorized access or exploit vulnerabilities on systems that you do not own or have explicit permission to test.

Ameeba and its authors do not endorse or condone malicious behavior and are not responsible for misuse of the content. Always follow ethical hacking guidelines, responsible disclosure practices, and local laws.
Ameeba Chat