Описание
ELSA-2014-0151: wget security and bug fix update (LOW)
[1.12-1.11]
- Add --trust-server-names option to fix CVE-2010-2252 (#833831)
[1.12-1.10]
- Build wget again with partial RELRO. LDFLAGS changed due to openssl rebase.
[1.12-1.9]
- Fix wget to recognize certificates with alternative names (#1060113)
Обновленные пакеты
Oracle Linux 6
Oracle Linux x86_64
wget
1.12-1.11.el6_5
Oracle Linux i686
wget
1.12-1.11.el6_5
Связанные CVE
Связанные уязвимости
GNU Wget 1.12 and earlier uses a server-provided filename instead of the original URL to determine the destination filename of a download, which allows remote servers to create or overwrite arbitrary files via a 3xx redirect to a URL with a .wgetrc filename followed by a 3xx redirect to a URL with a crafted filename, and possibly execute arbitrary code as a consequence of writing to a dotfile in a home directory.
GNU Wget 1.12 and earlier uses a server-provided filename instead of the original URL to determine the destination filename of a download, which allows remote servers to create or overwrite arbitrary files via a 3xx redirect to a URL with a .wgetrc filename followed by a 3xx redirect to a URL with a crafted filename, and possibly execute arbitrary code as a consequence of writing to a dotfile in a home directory.
GNU Wget 1.12 and earlier uses a server-provided filename instead of the original URL to determine the destination filename of a download, which allows remote servers to create or overwrite arbitrary files via a 3xx redirect to a URL with a .wgetrc filename followed by a 3xx redirect to a URL with a crafted filename, and possibly execute arbitrary code as a consequence of writing to a dotfile in a home directory.
GNU Wget 1.12 and earlier uses a server-provided filename instead of t ...
GNU Wget 1.12 and earlier uses a server-provided filename instead of the original URL to determine the destination filename of a download, which allows remote servers to create or overwrite arbitrary files via a 3xx redirect to a URL with a .wgetrc filename followed by a 3xx redirect to a URL with a crafted filename, and possibly execute arbitrary code as a consequence of writing to a dotfile in a home directory.