Reference material — not professional advice. Test in staging, back up first, verify against your specific version. Use your own judgment for your environment.
● High · CVSS 8.8

How to Fix CVE-2026-31622: NFC: digital: Bounds check NFC-A cascade depth in Linux

By Sai Kiran Pandrala

Other vulnerabilities in the same area that are worth patching alongside this one:

Last verified: 2026-05-25

CVE-2026-31622 is a nfc: digital: bounds check nfc-a cascade depth in Linux Linux. Fix it by upgrading to 6.6.136, 6.12.83, 6.18.24, 6.19.14, 7.0.1, 7.1-rc1.

⚡ At a glance
SeverityCVSS 8.8 - High
Actively exploited?Not currently in the CISA KEV catalog
AffectedLinux 2c66daecc4092e6049673c281b2e6f0d5e59a94c up to (excluding) 2819f34e08bdffb6f06a51c67948ec5737fb166a; Linux 2c66daecc4092e6049673c281b2e6f0d5e59a94c up to (excluding) 1bec5698b55aa2be5c3b983dba657c01d0fd3dbc; Linux 2c66daecc4092e6049673c281b2e6f0d5e59a94c up to (excluding) 5a59bf70c38ee1eb4be03bab830bbc3a6f0bd1f1; Linux 2c66daecc4092e6049673c281b2e6f0d5e59a94c up to (excluding) 8d9d9bf3565271ca7ab9c716a94e87296177e7ba; Linux 2c66daecc4092e6049673c281b2e6f0d5e59a94c up to (excluding) cc024a3de265ef6c58957f4990eccb9f806208cb; Linux 2c66daecc4092e6049673c281b2e6f0d5e59a94c up to (excluding) 46ce8be2ced389bccd84bcc04a12cf2f4d0c22d1
Fixed in6.6.136, 6.12.83, 6.18.24, 6.19.14, 7.0.1, 7.1-rc1
Type (CWE)Not verified

What is CVE-2026-31622?

CVE-2026-31622 is a nfc: digital: bounds check nfc-a cascade depth flaw in Linux Linux. It carries a CVSS base score of 8.8 (high). It is not currently listed in the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog.

From the source record: In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:

NFC: digital: Bounds check NFC-A cascade depth in SDD response handler

The NFC-A anti-collision cascade in digital_in_recv_sdd_res() appends 3

or 4 bytes to target->nfcid1 on each round, but the number of cascade

rounds is controlled entirely by the peer device. The peer sets the

cascade tag in the SDD_RES (deciding 3 vs 4 bytes) and the

cascade-incomplete bit in the SEL_RES (deciding whether another round

follows).

ISO 14443-3 limits NFC-A to three cascade levels and target->nfcid1 is

sized accordingly (NFC_NFCID1_MAXSIZE = 10), but nothing in the driver

actually enforces this. This means a malicious peer can keep the

cascade running, writing past the heap-allocated nfc_target with each

round.

Fix this by rejecting the response when the accumulated UID would exceed

the buffer.

Why it matters in practice: The blast radius depends on how the affected service is exposed. An internet-facing instance with no compensating controls is the highest-risk configuration.

Am I affected?

You are affected if your installation of Linux matches a version listed in the Affected row above.


# Debian/Ubuntu
dpkg -s linux | grep Version
# RHEL/Rocky
rpm -q linux

How to fix CVE-2026-31622

Apply the vendor patch. Target the build named in the Fixed in row above (6.6.136, 6.12.83, 6.18.24, 6.19.14, 7.0.1, 7.1-rc1). The runnable command set below covers the most common deployment patterns for Linux.

Ubuntu / Debian


sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install --only-upgrade linux
dpkg -s linux | grep Version

RHEL / CentOS / Rocky


sudo dnf upgrade linux -y
rpm -q linux

After applying the patch

  1. Restart the service or device so the patched binary loads.
  2. Confirm the running version matches the Fixed in row using the verification command below.
  3. Rotate credentials and API keys that the affected service could access if the asset was exposed during the disclosure window.

If you can't patch immediately

Until the patch lands, narrow the attack surface with these runnable controls.

Restrict network exposure

Block public access to the affected service at the perimeter. Allow only trusted source IPs.


# Linux iptables: only allow trusted admin subnet
sudo iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -s 10.10.10.0/24 -j ACCEPT
sudo iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 443 -j DROP
sudo iptables-save | sudo tee /etc/iptables/rules.v4

# Windows firewall: only allow trusted admin subnet on management port
New-NetFirewallRule -DisplayName "Restrict-Mgmt-Allow" -Direction Inbound -Action Allow `
  -RemoteAddress 10.10.10.0/24 -Protocol TCP -LocalPort 443
New-NetFirewallRule -DisplayName "Restrict-Mgmt-Deny"  -Direction Inbound -Action Block `
  -Protocol TCP -LocalPort 443

Mitigations are temporary. Apply the vendor patch as soon as a maintenance window opens.

How to verify the fix worked

Confirm the patched build is the one actually running.


# Debian/Ubuntu
dpkg -s linux | grep Version
# RHEL/Rocky
rpm -q linux

Expected: a version at or above 6.6.136, 6.12.83, 6.18.24, 6.19.14, 7.0.1, 7.1-rc1.

Also worth doing: pull recent log windows for indicators of compromise listed in the vendor advisory, and re-run an authenticated vulnerability scan with up-to-date signatures.

Frequently asked questions

Is CVE-2026-31622 being exploited in the wild?

As of 2026-05-25, CVE-2026-31622 is not listed in the CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog. Watch the catalog and patch on a normal cadence; KEV status can change as exploitation evidence emerges.

What is the CVSS score for CVE-2026-31622?

The CVSS base score is 8.8 (High).

What version fixes this?

Upgrade to 6.6.136, 6.12.83, 6.18.24, 6.19.14, 7.0.1, 7.1-rc1.

Will a WAF or IDS rule alone close this?

No. Network filters cut down opportunistic scans but they do not remove the flaw. The vendor patch is the only durable fix.

References


*Assembled from the official vendor advisory, the NVD record, and the CISA KEV listing on 2026-05-25. Always confirm against the vendor advisory before applying changes in production.*