Uncontrolled Recursion vulnerability in Samsung Open Source Escargot allows Excessive Allocation....

Description

Uncontrolled Recursion vulnerability in Samsung Open Source Escargot allows Excessive Allocation.

This issue affects Escargot: 590345cc6258317c5da850d846ce6baaf2afc2d3.

Basic information

Type
unreviewed
Severity
medium
Advisory on GitHub
Open advisory ↗
Repository advisory
Source code
Not specified
Published (advisory)
2026-05-19 09:31:20 UTC
Updated
2026-05-19 09:31:25 UTC
NVD published
2026-05-19

EPSS Score

Score Percentile
0.00% 0.20%

CVSS Scores

Base score Version Severity Vector
5.5 3.1
CVSS:3.1/AV:L/AC:L/PR:N/UI:R/S:U/C:N/I:N/A:H Click to expand
Attack vector (AV:L)
They already need access on the box, or another person has to do something wrong; it’s not a remote drive-by.
Attack complexity (AC:L)
Once they can reach the bug, pulling it off is straightforward—no weird race conditions or rare setup.
Privileges required (PR:N)
No account or special rights needed—anonymous or random user is enough.
User interaction (UI:R)
A real person has to do something—click, install, enable—otherwise it doesn’t land.
Scope (S:U)
Damage stays in the same “trust bubble” as the broken component—no big spill into unrelated systems.
Confidentiality (C:N)
Doesn’t really leak secrets in a meaningful way.
Integrity (I:N)
Data isn’t meaningfully altered or forged.
Availability (A:H)
Could take the service down hard or make it unusable for people who depend on it.

Identifiers

CWEs

CWE id Name
CWE-674 Uncontrolled Recursion

References

cvelogic Threat Intelligence