Product:

Sunos

(Sun)
Repositories

Unknown:

This might be proprietary software.

#Vulnerabilities 566
Date Id Summary Products Score Patch Annotated
2001-06-27 CVE-2001-0470 Buffer overflow in SNMP proxy agent snmpd in Solaris 8 may allow local users to gain root privileges by calling snmpd with a long program name. Sunos N/A
2001-07-02 CVE-2001-0426 Buffer overflow in dtsession on Solaris, and possibly other operating systems, allows local users to gain privileges via a long LANG environmental variable. Solaris, Sunos N/A
2001-07-02 CVE-2001-0422 Buffer overflow in Xsun in Solaris 8 and earlier allows local users to execute arbitrary commands via a long HOME environmental variable. Solaris, Sunos N/A
2001-07-02 CVE-2001-0421 FTP server in Solaris 8 and earlier allows local and remote attackers to cause a core dump in the root directory, possibly with world-readable permissions, by providing a valid username with an invalid password followed by a CWD ~ command, which could release sensitive information such as shadowed passwords, or fill the disk partition. Solaris, Sunos N/A
2001-06-18 CVE-2001-0403 /opt/JSparm/bin/perfmon program in Solaris allows local users to create arbitrary files as root via the Logging File option in the GUI. Sunos N/A
2001-06-18 CVE-2001-0401 Buffer overflow in tip in Solaris 8 and earlier allows local users to execute arbitrary commands via a long HOME environmental variable. Solaris, Sunos N/A
2001-07-21 CVE-2001-0353 Buffer overflow in the line printer daemon (in.lpd) for Solaris 8 and earlier allows local and remote attackers to gain root privileges via a "transfer job" routine. Solaris, Sunos N/A
2001-05-03 CVE-2001-0269 pam_ldap authentication module in Solaris 8 allows remote attackers to bypass authentication via a NULL password. Sunos N/A
2001-05-03 CVE-2001-0236 Buffer overflow in Solaris snmpXdmid SNMP to DMI mapper daemon allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary commands via a long "indication" event. Solaris, Sunos N/A
2001-03-26 CVE-2001-0190 Buffer overflow in /usr/bin/cu in Solaris 2.8 and earlier, and possibly other operating systems, allows local users to gain privileges by executing cu with a long program name (arg0). Solaris, Sunos N/A