| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Sun's ftpd daemon can be subjected to a denial of service. |
| Certain BSD-based Telnet clients, including those used on Solaris and SuSE Linux, allow remote malicious Telnet servers to read sensitive environment variables via the NEW-ENVIRON option with a SEND ENV_USERVAR command. |
| rpc.statd allows remote attackers to forward RPC calls to the local operating system via the SM_MON and SM_NOTIFY commands, which in turn could be used to remotely exploit other bugs such as in automountd. |
| A Unix account has a default, null, blank, or missing password. |
| The Xsun server for Sun Solaris 2.6 through 9, when running in Direct Graphics Access (DGA) mode, allows local users to cause a denial of service (Xsun crash) or to create or overwrite arbitrary files on the system, probably via a symlink attack on temporary server files. |
| Buffer overflow in NIS+, in Sun's rpc.nisd program. |
| Race condition in Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows local users to cause a denial of service (kernel panic), as demonstrated via the namefs function, pipe, and certain STREAMS routines. |
| TIOCCONS in SunOS 4.1.1 does not properly check the permissions of a user who tries to redirect console output and input, which could allow a local user to gain privileges. |
| The patches (1) 105693-13, (2) 108800-02, (3) 105694-13, and (4) 108801-02 for cachefs on Solaris 2.6 and 7 overwrite the inetd.conf file, which may silently reenable services and allow remote attackers to bypass the intended security policy. |
| Unknown vulnerability in patches 108993-14 through 108993-19 and 108994-14 through 108994-19 for Solaris 8 may allow local users to cause a denial of service (automountd crash). |
| Buffer overflow in the syslog daemon for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (syslogd crash) and possibly execute arbitrary code via long syslog UDP packets. |
| Unknown vulnerability in rpcbind for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (rpcbind crash). |
| rpc.walld (wall daemon) for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows local users to send messages to logged on users that appear to come from arbitrary user IDs by closing stderr before executing wall, then supplying a spoofed from header. |
| Memory leak in lofiadm in Solaris 8 allows local users to cause a denial of service (kernel memory consumption). |
| Stack-based buffer overflow in the bsd_queue() function for lpq on Solaris 2.6 and 7 allows local users to gain root privilege. |
| Heap-based buffer overflow in dtsession for Solaris 2.5.1 through Solaris 9 allows local users to gain root privileges via a long HOME environment variable. |
| Unspecified vulnerability in Solaris 8 and 9 allows local users to obtain the LDAP Directory Server root Distinguished Name (rootDN) password when a privileged user (1) runs idsconfig; or "insecurely" runs LDAP2 commands with the -w option, including (2) ldapadd, (3) ldapdelete, (4) ldapmodify, (5) ldapmodrdn, and (6) ldapsearch. |
| Multiple format string vulnerabilities in in.rarpd (ARP server) on Solaris, Caldera UnixWare and Open UNIX, and possibly other operating systems, allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code via format strings that are not properly handled in the functions (1) syserr and (2) error. |
| Command execution in Sun systems via buffer overflow in the at program. |
| ping in Solaris 2.3 through 2.6 allows local users to cause a denial of service (crash) via a ping request to a multicast address through the loopback interface, e.g. via ping -i. |