| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Incorrect Authorization vulnerability in Drupal CivicTheme Design System allows Forceful Browsing.This issue affects CivicTheme Design System: from 0.0.0 before 1.12.0. |
| Improper Neutralization of Input During Web Page Generation ('Cross-site Scripting') vulnerability in Drupal Umami Analytics allows Cross-Site Scripting (XSS).This issue affects Umami Analytics: from 0.0.0 before 1.0.1. |
| Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) vulnerability in Drupal Currency allows Cross Site Request Forgery.This issue affects Currency: from 0.0.0 before 3.5.0. |
| Improper Validation of Consistency within Input vulnerability in Drupal Reverse Proxy Header allows Manipulating User-Controlled Variables.This issue affects Reverse Proxy Header: from 0.0.0 before 1.1.2. |
| Improper Restriction of Excessive Authentication Attempts vulnerability in Drupal Access code allows Brute Force.This issue affects Access code: from 0.0.0 before 2.0.5. |
| Improper Neutralization of Input During Web Page Generation ('Cross-site Scripting') vulnerability in Drupal Plausible tracking allows Cross-Site Scripting (XSS).This issue affects Plausible tracking: from 0.0.0 before 1.0.2. |
| Improper Neutralization of Input During Web Page Generation ('Cross-site Scripting') vulnerability in Drupal JSON Field allows Cross-Site Scripting (XSS).This issue affects JSON Field: from 0.0.0 before 1.5. |
| The ParseAddress function constructeds domain-literal address components through repeated string concatenation. When parsing large domain-literal components, this can cause excessive CPU consumption. |
| The Reader.ReadResponse function constructs a response string through repeated string concatenation of lines. When the number of lines in a response is large, this can cause excessive CPU consumption. |
| The processing time for parsing some invalid inputs scales non-linearly with respect to the size of the input. This affects programs which parse untrusted PEM inputs. |
| When Conn.Handshake fails during ALPN negotiation the error contains attacker controlled information (the ALPN protocols sent by the client) which is not escaped. |
| Validating certificate chains which contain DSA public keys can cause programs to panic, due to a interface cast that assumes they implement the Equal method. This affects programs which validate arbitrary certificate chains. |
| Due to the design of the name constraint checking algorithm, the processing time of some inputs scals non-linearly with respect to the size of the certificate. This affects programs which validate arbitrary certificate chains. |
| Despite HTTP headers having a default limit of 1MB, the number of cookies that can be parsed does not have a limit. By sending a lot of very small cookies such as "a=;", an attacker can make an HTTP server allocate a large amount of structs, causing large memory consumption. |
| Parsing a maliciously crafted DER payload could allocate large amounts of memory, causing memory exhaustion. |
| tar.Reader does not set a maximum size on the number of sparse region data blocks in GNU tar pax 1.0 sparse files. A maliciously-crafted archive containing a large number of sparse regions can cause a Reader to read an unbounded amount of data from the archive into memory. When reading from a compressed source, a small compressed input can result in large allocations. |
| Cryptographic validation of upgrade images could be circumventing by dropping a specifically crafted file into the upgrade ISO |
| On affected platforms, restricted users could view sensitive portions of the config database via a debug API (e.g., user password hashes) |
| On affected platforms, if SSH session multiplexing was configured on the client side, SSH sessions (e.g, scp, sftp) multiplexed onto the same channel could perform file-system operations after a configured session timeout expired |
| On affected platforms, restricted users could use SSH port forwarding to access host-internal services |