Количество 21
Количество 21

BDU:2019-02762
Уязвимость функции net_hash_mix () ядра операционной системы Linux, позволяющая нарушителю раскрыть защищаемую информацию

CVE-2019-10639
The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows Information Exposure (partial kernel address disclosure), leading to a KASLR bypass. Specifically, it is possible to extract the KASLR kernel image offset using the IP ID values the kernel produces for connection-less protocols (e.g., UDP and ICMP). When such traffic is sent to multiple destination IP addresses, it is possible to obtain hash collisions (of indices to the counter array) and thereby obtain the hashing key (via enumeration). This key contains enough bits from a kernel address (of a static variable) so when the key is extracted (via enumeration), the offset of the kernel image is exposed. This attack can be carried out remotely, by the attacker forcing the target device to send UDP or ICMP (or certain other) traffic to attacker-controlled IP addresses. Forcing a server to send UDP traffic is trivial if the server is a DNS server. ICMP traffic is trivial if the server answers ICMP Echo requests (ping). ...

CVE-2019-10639
The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows Information Exposure (partial kernel address disclosure), leading to a KASLR bypass. Specifically, it is possible to extract the KASLR kernel image offset using the IP ID values the kernel produces for connection-less protocols (e.g., UDP and ICMP). When such traffic is sent to multiple destination IP addresses, it is possible to obtain hash collisions (of indices to the counter array) and thereby obtain the hashing key (via enumeration). This key contains enough bits from a kernel address (of a static variable) so when the key is extracted (via enumeration), the offset of the kernel image is exposed. This attack can be carried out remotely, by the attacker forcing the target device to send UDP or ICMP (or certain other) traffic to attacker-controlled IP addresses. Forcing a server to send UDP traffic is trivial if the server is a DNS server. ICMP traffic is trivial if the server answers ICMP Echo requests (ping). ...

CVE-2019-10639
The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows Information Exposure (partial kernel address disclosure), leading to a KASLR bypass. Specifically, it is possible to extract the KASLR kernel image offset using the IP ID values the kernel produces for connection-less protocols (e.g., UDP and ICMP). When such traffic is sent to multiple destination IP addresses, it is possible to obtain hash collisions (of indices to the counter array) and thereby obtain the hashing key (via enumeration). This key contains enough bits from a kernel address (of a static variable) so when the key is extracted (via enumeration), the offset of the kernel image is exposed. This attack can be carried out remotely, by the attacker forcing the target device to send UDP or ICMP (or certain other) traffic to attacker-controlled IP addresses. Forcing a server to send UDP traffic is trivial if the server is a DNS server. ICMP traffic is trivial if the server answers ICMP Echo requests (ping). For
CVE-2019-10639
The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows I ...
GHSA-r86q-xwfj-whpp
The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows Information Exposure (partial kernel address disclosure), leading to a KASLR bypass. Specifically, it is possible to extract the KASLR kernel image offset using the IP ID values the kernel produces for connection-less protocols (e.g., UDP and ICMP). When such traffic is sent to multiple destination IP addresses, it is possible to obtain hash collisions (of indices to the counter array) and thereby obtain the hashing key (via enumeration). This key contains enough bits from a kernel address (of a static variable) so when the key is extracted (via enumeration), the offset of the kernel image is exposed. This attack can be carried out remotely, by the attacker forcing the target device to send UDP or ICMP (or certain other) traffic to attacker-controlled IP addresses. Forcing a server to send UDP traffic is trivial if the server is a DNS server. ICMP traffic is trivial if the server answers ICMP Echo requests (ping). ...

SUSE-SU-2019:1854-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel

openSUSE-SU-2019:1716-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel
ELSA-2020-5837
ELSA-2020-5837: Unbreakable Enterprise kernel security update (IMPORTANT)

openSUSE-SU-2019:1757-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel

SUSE-SU-2019:1852-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel

SUSE-SU-2019:1851-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel

SUSE-SU-2019:1829-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel

SUSE-SU-2019:1823-2
Security update for the Linux Kernel

SUSE-SU-2019:1823-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel

SUSE-SU-2019:1855-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel
ELSA-2020-1769
ELSA-2020-1769: kernel security, bug fix, and enhancement update (IMPORTANT)

SUSE-SU-2019:2069-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel for Azure
ELSA-2020-1016
ELSA-2020-1016: kernel security, bug fix, and enhancement update (MODERATE)

SUSE-SU-2019:2450-1
Security update for the Linux Kernel
Уязвимостей на страницу
Уязвимость | CVSS | EPSS | Опубликовано | |
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | BDU:2019-02762 Уязвимость функции net_hash_mix () ядра операционной системы Linux, позволяющая нарушителю раскрыть защищаемую информацию | CVSS3: 7.5 | 1% Низкий | около 6 лет назад |
![]() | CVE-2019-10639 The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows Information Exposure (partial kernel address disclosure), leading to a KASLR bypass. Specifically, it is possible to extract the KASLR kernel image offset using the IP ID values the kernel produces for connection-less protocols (e.g., UDP and ICMP). When such traffic is sent to multiple destination IP addresses, it is possible to obtain hash collisions (of indices to the counter array) and thereby obtain the hashing key (via enumeration). This key contains enough bits from a kernel address (of a static variable) so when the key is extracted (via enumeration), the offset of the kernel image is exposed. This attack can be carried out remotely, by the attacker forcing the target device to send UDP or ICMP (or certain other) traffic to attacker-controlled IP addresses. Forcing a server to send UDP traffic is trivial if the server is a DNS server. ICMP traffic is trivial if the server answers ICMP Echo requests (ping). ... | CVSS3: 7.5 | 1% Низкий | почти 6 лет назад |
![]() | CVE-2019-10639 The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows Information Exposure (partial kernel address disclosure), leading to a KASLR bypass. Specifically, it is possible to extract the KASLR kernel image offset using the IP ID values the kernel produces for connection-less protocols (e.g., UDP and ICMP). When such traffic is sent to multiple destination IP addresses, it is possible to obtain hash collisions (of indices to the counter array) and thereby obtain the hashing key (via enumeration). This key contains enough bits from a kernel address (of a static variable) so when the key is extracted (via enumeration), the offset of the kernel image is exposed. This attack can be carried out remotely, by the attacker forcing the target device to send UDP or ICMP (or certain other) traffic to attacker-controlled IP addresses. Forcing a server to send UDP traffic is trivial if the server is a DNS server. ICMP traffic is trivial if the server answers ICMP Echo requests (ping). ... | CVSS3: 3.7 | 1% Низкий | почти 6 лет назад |
![]() | CVE-2019-10639 The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows Information Exposure (partial kernel address disclosure), leading to a KASLR bypass. Specifically, it is possible to extract the KASLR kernel image offset using the IP ID values the kernel produces for connection-less protocols (e.g., UDP and ICMP). When such traffic is sent to multiple destination IP addresses, it is possible to obtain hash collisions (of indices to the counter array) and thereby obtain the hashing key (via enumeration). This key contains enough bits from a kernel address (of a static variable) so when the key is extracted (via enumeration), the offset of the kernel image is exposed. This attack can be carried out remotely, by the attacker forcing the target device to send UDP or ICMP (or certain other) traffic to attacker-controlled IP addresses. Forcing a server to send UDP traffic is trivial if the server is a DNS server. ICMP traffic is trivial if the server answers ICMP Echo requests (ping). For | CVSS3: 7.5 | 1% Низкий | почти 6 лет назад |
CVE-2019-10639 The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows I ... | CVSS3: 7.5 | 1% Низкий | почти 6 лет назад | |
GHSA-r86q-xwfj-whpp The Linux kernel 4.x (starting from 4.1) and 5.x before 5.0.8 allows Information Exposure (partial kernel address disclosure), leading to a KASLR bypass. Specifically, it is possible to extract the KASLR kernel image offset using the IP ID values the kernel produces for connection-less protocols (e.g., UDP and ICMP). When such traffic is sent to multiple destination IP addresses, it is possible to obtain hash collisions (of indices to the counter array) and thereby obtain the hashing key (via enumeration). This key contains enough bits from a kernel address (of a static variable) so when the key is extracted (via enumeration), the offset of the kernel image is exposed. This attack can be carried out remotely, by the attacker forcing the target device to send UDP or ICMP (or certain other) traffic to attacker-controlled IP addresses. Forcing a server to send UDP traffic is trivial if the server is a DNS server. ICMP traffic is trivial if the server answers ICMP Echo requests (ping). ... | 1% Низкий | около 3 лет назад | ||
![]() | SUSE-SU-2019:1854-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel | почти 6 лет назад | ||
![]() | openSUSE-SU-2019:1716-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel | почти 6 лет назад | ||
ELSA-2020-5837 ELSA-2020-5837: Unbreakable Enterprise kernel security update (IMPORTANT) | почти 5 лет назад | |||
![]() | openSUSE-SU-2019:1757-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel | почти 6 лет назад | ||
![]() | SUSE-SU-2019:1852-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel | почти 6 лет назад | ||
![]() | SUSE-SU-2019:1851-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel | почти 6 лет назад | ||
![]() | SUSE-SU-2019:1829-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel | почти 6 лет назад | ||
![]() | SUSE-SU-2019:1823-2 Security update for the Linux Kernel | почти 6 лет назад | ||
![]() | SUSE-SU-2019:1823-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel | почти 6 лет назад | ||
![]() | SUSE-SU-2019:1855-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel | почти 6 лет назад | ||
ELSA-2020-1769 ELSA-2020-1769: kernel security, bug fix, and enhancement update (IMPORTANT) | около 5 лет назад | |||
![]() | SUSE-SU-2019:2069-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel for Azure | почти 6 лет назад | ||
ELSA-2020-1016 ELSA-2020-1016: kernel security, bug fix, and enhancement update (MODERATE) | около 5 лет назад | |||
![]() | SUSE-SU-2019:2450-1 Security update for the Linux Kernel | больше 5 лет назад |
Уязвимостей на страницу