CVE detail
CVE-2026-15409: SonicWall SMA1000 Appliances Server-Side Request Forgery Vulnerability
Source: CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog · back to feed
Vendor / product
SonicWall · SMA1000 Appliances
- Date added (KEV)
- Jul 14, 2026
- CISA due date
- Jul 17, 2026
- Ransomware campaign use
- Unknown
Required action
Apply mitigations in accordance with vendor instructions, ensuring compliance with CISA’s BOD 26-04 Prioritizing Security Updates Based on Risk (see URL in Notes) guidance and CISA’s “Forensics Triage Requirements” (see URL in Notes). Follow applicable BOD 26-04 guidance for cloud services or discontinue use of the product if mitigations are unavailable. Stakeholders are responsible for evaluating each asset's internet exposure and ensuring adherence to BOD 26-04 patching guidelines.
Vendor fix: Vendor advisory
Scorifya interpretation
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Plain English
Technical detail
From CISA
SonicWall SMA1000 Appliances contain a server-side request forgery vulnerability that could allow a remote unauthenticated attacker to potentially cause the appliance to make requests to unintended location.
https://psirt.global.sonicwall.com/vuln-detail/SNWLID-2026-0008 ; BOD 26-04: https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/directives/bod-26-04-prioritizing-security-updates-based-risk ; Forensics Triage Requirements: https://www.cisa.gov/news-events/directives/bod-26-04-implementation-guidance-prioritizing-security-updates-based-risk ; https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2026-15409
See what attackers can see on your domain
This vulnerability is on CISA's Known Exploited Vulnerabilities list, so it is being exploited in the wild right now. Scorifya can't test for SonicWall directly, but in about 30 seconds it shows what your own domain exposes publicly across TLS, security headers, DNS, and cookies: the surface attackers probe first.
SOC 2 compliance
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