Vulnerabilities > SGI > Irix > 6.5.18m

DATE CVE VULNERABILITY TITLE RISK
2002-12-31 CVE-2002-2185 Denial Of Service vulnerability in Multiple Vendor Spoofed IGMP Report
The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) allows local users to cause a denial of service via an IGMP membership report to a target's Ethernet address instead of the Multicast group address, which causes the target to stop sending reports to the router and effectively disconnect the group from the network.
local
low complexity
sgi debian mandrakesoft microsoft redhat suse
4.9
2002-12-27 CVE-2002-1584 Privilege Escalation vulnerability in Sun Solaris RPC AUTH_DES
Unknown vulnerability in the AUTH_DES authentication for RPC in Solaris 2.5.1, 2.6, and 7, SGI IRIX 6.5 to 6.5.19f, and possibly other platforms, allows remote attackers to gain privileges.
network
low complexity
sgi sun
critical
10.0
2002-12-11 CVE-2002-1323 Safe.pm 2.0.7 and earlier, when used in Perl 5.8.0 and earlier, may allow attackers to break out of safe compartments in (1) Safe::reval or (2) Safe::rdo using a redefined @_ variable, which is not reset between successive calls.
local
low complexity
safe-pm sun sgi redhat sco
4.6
2001-06-18 CVE-2001-0249 Incorrect Calculation of Buffer Size vulnerability in multiple products
Heap overflow in FTP daemon in Solaris 8 allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary commands by creating a long pathname and calling the LIST command, which uses glob to generate long strings.
network
low complexity
hp oracle sgi CWE-131
critical
9.8
2000-01-08 CVE-2000-1221 The line printer daemon (lpd) in the lpr package in multiple Linux operating systems authenticates by comparing the reverse-resolved hostname of the local machine to the hostname of the print server as returned by gethostname, which allows remote attackers to bypass intended access controls by modifying the DNS for the attacking IP.
network
low complexity
sgi debian redhat
critical
10.0
2000-01-08 CVE-2000-1220 The line printer daemon (lpd) in the lpr package in multiple Linux operating systems allows local users to gain root privileges by causing sendmail to execute with arbitrary command line arguments, as demonstrated using the -C option to specify a configuration file.
network
low complexity
sgi redhat
critical
10.0