| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| Buffer overflow in the sppp driver in FreeBSD 4.11 through 6.1, NetBSD 2.0 through 4.0 beta before 20060823, and OpenBSD 3.8 and 3.9 before 20060902 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (panic), obtain sensitive information, and possibly execute arbitrary code via crafted Link Control Protocol (LCP) packets with an option length that exceeds the overall length, which triggers the overflow in (1) pppoe and (2) ippp. NOTE: this issue was originally incorrectly reported for the ppp driver. |
| Format string vulnerability in OpenBSD fstat program (and possibly other BSD-based operating systems) allows local users to gain root privileges via the PWD environmental variable. |
| Buffer overflow in BNU UUCP daemon (uucpd) through long hostnames. |
| mmap function in BSD allows local attackers in the kmem group to modify memory through devices. |
| A race condition between the select() and accept() calls in NetBSD TCP servers allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service. |
| Denial of service in "poll" in OpenBSD. |
| OpenBSD kernel crash through TSS handling, as caused by the crashme program. |
| OpenBSD crash using nlink value in FFS and EXT2FS filesystems. |
| Buffer overflow in OpenBSD ping. |
| Remote attackers can cause a system crash through ipintr() in ipq in OpenBSD. |
| OpenBSD, BSDI, and other Unix operating systems allow users to set chflags and fchflags on character and block devices. |
| Buffer overflow in OpenBSD procfs and fdescfs file systems via uio_offset in the readdir() function. |
| A kernel leak in the OpenBSD kernel allows IPsec packets to be sent unencrypted. |
| An SSH 1.2.27 server allows a client to use the "none" cipher, even if it is not allowed by the server policy. |
| The asynchronous I/O facility in 4.4 BSD kernel does not check user credentials when setting the recipient of I/O notification, which allows local users to cause a denial of service by using certain ioctl and fcntl calls to cause the signal to be sent to an arbitrary process ID. |
| The BSD make program allows local users to modify files via a symlink attack when the -j option is being used. |
| The SSH protocol server sshd allows local users without shell access to redirect a TCP connection through a service that uses the standard system password database for authentication, such as POP or FTP. |
| The default configuration of SSH allows X forwarding, which could allow a remote attacker to control a client's X sessions via a malicious xauth program. |
| The i386 trace-trap handling in OpenBSD 2.4 with DDB enabled allows a local user to cause a denial of service. |
| IP fragment assembly in OpenBSD 2.4 allows a remote attacker to cause a denial of service by sending a large number of fragmented packets. |