Note:
This project will be discontinued after December 13, 2021. [more]
Product:
Geode
(Apache)Repositories |
Unknown: This might be proprietary software. |
#Vulnerabilities | 21 |
Date | Id | Summary | Products | Score | Patch | Annotated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020-02-24 | CVE-2020-1938 | When using the Apache JServ Protocol (AJP), care must be taken when trusting incoming connections to Apache Tomcat. Tomcat treats AJP connections as having higher trust than, for example, a similar HTTP connection. If such connections are available to an attacker, they can be exploited in ways that may be surprising. In Apache Tomcat 9.0.0.M1 to 9.0.0.30, 8.5.0 to 8.5.50 and 7.0.0 to 7.0.99, Tomcat shipped with an AJP Connector enabled by default that listened on all configured IP addresses.... | Geode, Tomcat, Good_control, Workspaces_server, Debian_linux, Fedora, Data_availability_services, Oncommand_system_manager, Leap, Agile_engineering_data_management, Agile_plm, Communications_element_manager, Communications_instant_messaging_server, Health_sciences_empirica_inspections, Health_sciences_empirica_signal, Hospitality_guest_access, Instantis_enterprisetrack, Mysql_enterprise_monitor, Siebel_ui_framework, Transportation_management, Workload_manager | 9.8 | ||
2017-04-04 | CVE-2017-5649 | Apache Geode before 1.1.1, when a cluster has enabled security by setting the security-manager property, allows remote authenticated users with CLUSTER:READ but not DATA:READ permission to access the data browser page in Pulse and consequently execute an OQL query that exposes data stored in the cluster. | Geode | 7.5 | ||
2017-09-30 | CVE-2017-9794 | When a cluster is operating in secure mode, a user with read privileges for specific data regions can use the gfsh command line utility to execute queries. In Apache Geode before 1.2.1, the query results may contain data from another user's concurrently executing gfsh query, potentially revealing data that the user is not authorized to view. | Geode | 4.3 | ||
2017-10-03 | CVE-2017-9797 | When an Apache Geode cluster before v1.2.1 is operating in secure mode, an unauthenticated client can enter multi-user authentication mode and send metadata messages. These metadata operations could leak information about application data types. In addition, an attacker could perform a denial of service attack on the cluster. | Geode | 6.5 | ||
2018-01-10 | CVE-2017-12622 | When an Apache Geode cluster before v1.3.0 is operating in secure mode and an authenticated user connects to a Geode cluster using the gfsh tool with HTTP, the user is able to obtain status information and control cluster members even without CLUSTER:MANAGE privileges. | Geode | 7.1 | ||
2018-01-10 | CVE-2017-9795 | When an Apache Geode cluster before v1.3.0 is operating in secure mode, a user with read access to specific regions within a Geode cluster may execute OQL queries that allow read and write access to objects within unauthorized regions. In addition a user could invoke methods that allow remote code execution. | Geode | 7.5 | ||
2018-01-10 | CVE-2017-9796 | When an Apache Geode cluster before v1.3.0 is operating in secure mode, a user with read access to specific regions within a Geode cluster may execute OQL queries containing a region name as a bind parameter that allow read access to objects within unauthorized regions. | Geode | 5.3 | ||
2018-02-26 | CVE-2017-15696 | When an Apache Geode cluster before v1.4.0 is operating in secure mode, the Geode configuration service does not properly authorize configuration requests. This allows an unprivileged user who gains access to the Geode locator to extract configuration data and previously deployed application code. | Geode | 7.5 | ||
2018-02-27 | CVE-2017-15692 | In Apache Geode before v1.4.0, the TcpServer within the Geode locator opens a network port that deserializes data. If an unprivileged user gains access to the Geode locator, they may be able to cause remote code execution if certain classes are present on the classpath. | Geode | 9.8 | ||
2018-02-27 | CVE-2017-15693 | In Apache Geode before v1.4.0, the Geode server stores application objects in serialized form. Certain cluster operations and API invocations cause these objects to be deserialized. A user with DATA:WRITE access to the cluster may be able to cause remote code execution if certain classes are present on the classpath. | Geode | 7.5 |