Filtered by vendor Dragonflybsd
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Filtered by product Dragonflybsd
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Total
6 CVE
CVE | Vendors | Products | Updated | CVSS v3.1 |
---|---|---|---|---|
CVE-2008-4609 | 12 Bsd, Bsdi, Cisco and 9 more | 22 Bsd, Bsd Os, Catalyst Blade Switch 3020 and 19 more | 2024-11-21 | N/A |
The TCP implementation in (1) Linux, (2) platforms based on BSD Unix, (3) Microsoft Windows, (4) Cisco products, and probably other operating systems allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (connection queue exhaustion) via multiple vectors that manipulate information in the TCP state table, as demonstrated by sockstress. | ||||
CVE-2008-1148 | 8 Apple, Cosmicperl, Darwin and 5 more | 9 Mac Os X, Mac Os X Server, Directory Pro and 6 more | 2024-11-21 | N/A |
A certain pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) algorithm that uses ADD with 0 random hops (aka "Algorithm A0"), as used in OpenBSD 3.5 through 4.2 and NetBSD 1.6.2 through 4.0, allows remote attackers to guess sensitive values such as (1) DNS transaction IDs or (2) IP fragmentation IDs by observing a sequence of previously generated values. NOTE: this issue can be leveraged for attacks such as DNS cache poisoning, injection into TCP packets, and OS fingerprinting. | ||||
CVE-2008-1147 | 8 Apple, Cosmicperl, Darwin and 5 more | 9 Mac Os X, Mac Os X Server, Directory Pro and 6 more | 2024-11-21 | N/A |
A certain pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) algorithm that uses XOR and 2-bit random hops (aka "Algorithm X2"), as used in OpenBSD 2.6 through 3.4, Mac OS X 10 through 10.5.1, FreeBSD 4.4 through 7.0, and DragonFlyBSD 1.0 through 1.10.1, allows remote attackers to guess sensitive values such as IP fragmentation IDs by observing a sequence of previously generated values. NOTE: this issue can be leveraged for attacks such as injection into TCP packets and OS fingerprinting. | ||||
CVE-2008-1146 | 8 Apple, Cosmicperl, Darwin and 5 more | 9 Mac Os X, Mac Os X Server, Directory Pro and 6 more | 2024-11-21 | N/A |
A certain pseudo-random number generator (PRNG) algorithm that uses XOR and 3-bit random hops (aka "Algorithm X3"), as used in OpenBSD 2.8 through 4.2, allows remote attackers to guess sensitive values such as DNS transaction IDs by observing a sequence of previously generated values. NOTE: this issue can be leveraged for attacks such as DNS cache poisoning against OpenBSD's modification of BIND. | ||||
CVE-2006-6013 | 5 Dragonflybsd, Freebsd, Midnightbsd and 2 more | 5 Dragonflybsd, Freebsd, Midnightbsd and 2 more | 2024-11-21 | N/A |
Integer signedness error in the fw_ioctl (FW_IOCTL) function in the FireWire (IEEE-1394) drivers (dev/firewire/fwdev.c) in various BSD kernels, including DragonFlyBSD, FreeBSD 5.5, MidnightBSD 0.1-CURRENT before 20061115, NetBSD-current before 20061116, NetBSD-4 before 20061203, and TrustedBSD, allows local users to read arbitrary memory contents via certain negative values of crom_buf->len in an FW_GCROM command. NOTE: this issue has been labeled as an integer overflow, but it is more like an integer signedness error. | ||||
CVE-2005-0708 | 2 Dragonflybsd, Freebsd | 2 Dragonflybsd, Freebsd | 2024-11-20 | N/A |
The sendfile system call in FreeBSD 4.8 through 4.11 and 5 through 5.4 can transfer portions of kernel memory if a file is truncated while it is being sent, which could allow remote attackers to obtain sensitive information. |
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