| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| admintool in Solaris allows a local user to write to arbitrary files and gain root access. |
| Kodak Color Management System (KCMS) on Solaris allows a local user to write to arbitrary files and gain root access. |
| Kerberos 4 key servers allow a user to masquerade as another by breaking and generating session keys. |
| A race condition in the Solaris ps command allows an attacker to overwrite critical files. |
| NFS cache poisoning. |
| In SunOS, NFS file handles could be guessed, giving unauthorized access to the exported file system. |
| The portmapper may act as a proxy and redirect service requests from an attacker, making the request appear to come from the local host, possibly bypassing authentication that would otherwise have taken place. For example, NFS file systems could be mounted through the portmapper despite export restrictions. |
| In SunOS or Solaris, a remote user could connect from an FTP server's data port to an rlogin server on a host that trusts the FTP server, allowing remote command execution. |
| The passwd command in Solaris can be subjected to a denial of service. |
| Solaris rpcbind listens on a high numbered UDP port, which may not be filtered since the standard port number is 111. |
| Solaris rpcbind can be exploited to overwrite arbitrary files and gain root access. |
| Denial of service by sending forged ICMP unreachable packets. |
| Malicious option settings in UDP packets could force a reboot in SunOS 4.1.3 systems. |
| Solaris syslogd crashes when receiving a message from a host that doesn't have an inverse DNS entry. |
| Guessable magic cookies in X Windows allows remote attackers to execute commands, e.g. through xterm. |
| Solaris SUNWadmap can be exploited to obtain root access. |
| Denial of service through Solaris 2.5.1 telnet by sending ^D characters. |
| Buffer overflow in xmcd 2.0p12 allows local users to gain access through an environmental variable. |
| In Solaris 2.2 and 2.3, when fsck fails on startup, it allows a local user with physical access to obtain root access. |
| Jolt ICMP attack causes a denial of service in Windows 95 and Windows NT systems. |