Vulnerabilities > Freebsd > Freebsd > 2.1.5

DATE CVE VULNERABILITY TITLE RISK
1999-07-15 CVE-1999-1518 Denial of Service vulnerability in Multiple Vendor Shared Memory
Operating systems with shared memory implementations based on BSD 4.4 code allow a user to conduct a denial of service and bypass memory limits (e.g., as specified with rlimits) using mmap or shmget to allocate memory and cause page faults.
network
low complexity
freebsd netbsd
5.0
1999-02-18 CVE-1999-0405 A buffer overflow in lsof allows local users to obtain root privilege.
local
low complexity
debian freebsd redhat suse
7.2
1998-11-04 CVE-1999-0052 IP fragmentation denial of service in FreeBSD allows a remote attacker to cause a crash.
network
low complexity
bsdi freebsd openbsd
5.0
1998-01-05 CVE-1999-0513 ICMP messages to broadcast addresses are allowed, allowing for a Smurf attack that can cause a denial of service.
network
low complexity
sun digital ibm freebsd linux hp netbsd
5.0
1997-04-07 CVE-1999-1298 Unspecified vulnerability in Freebsd
Sysinstall in FreeBSD 2.2.1 and earlier, when configuring anonymous FTP, creates the ftp user without a password and with /bin/date as the shell, which could allow attackers to gain access to certain system resources.
network
low complexity
freebsd
7.5
1996-12-19 CVE-1999-1385 Unspecified vulnerability in Freebsd
Buffer overflow in ppp program in FreeBSD 2.1 and earlier allows local users to gain privileges via a long HOME environment variable.
local
low complexity
freebsd
7.2
1996-12-10 CVE-1999-0096 Sendmail decode alias can be used to overwrite sensitive files.
network
low complexity
bsdi freebsd sco
5.0
1996-12-03 CVE-1999-0129 Sendmail allows local users to write to a file and gain group permissions via a .forward or :include: file.
local
low complexity
eric-allman sco sun hp ibm bsdi freebsd
4.6
1996-11-16 CVE-1999-0130 Local users can start Sendmail in daemon mode and gain root privileges.
local
low complexity
caldera eric-allman bsdi freebsd hp ibm redhat
7.2
1996-10-25 CVE-1999-0032 Buffer overflow in lpr, as used in BSD-based systems including Linux, allows local users to execute arbitrary code as root via a long -C (classification) command line option.
local
low complexity
sgi bsdi freebsd next sun
7.2