Vulnerabilities > SUN > Sunos > 4.1
DATE | CVE | VULNERABILITY TITLE | RISK |
---|---|---|---|
1997-05-19 | CVE-1999-1191 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Solaris and Sunos Buffer overflow in chkey in Solaris 2.5.1 and earlier allows local users to gain root privileges via a long command line argument. | 7.2 |
1997-03-01 | CVE-1999-0165 | NFS cache poisoning. | 10.0 |
1997-01-01 | CVE-1999-0217 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos Malicious option settings in UDP packets could force a reboot in SunOS 4.1.3 systems. | 5.0 |
1996-04-18 | CVE-1999-0078 | pcnfsd (aka rpc.pcnfsd) allows local users to change file permissions, or execute arbitrary commands through arguments in the RPC call. | 1.9 |
1994-05-13 | CVE-1999-1388 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos 4.1 passwd in SunOS 4.1.x allows local users to overwrite arbitrary files via a symlink attack and the -F command line argument. | 6.2 |
1994-03-21 | CVE-1999-0120 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos 4.1 Sun/Solaris utmp file allows local users to gain root access if it is writable by users other than root. | 7.2 |
1993-10-01 | CVE-1999-1137 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Solaris and Sunos The permissions for the /dev/audio device on Solaris 2.2 and earlier, and SunOS 4.1.x, allow any local user to read from the device, which could be used by an attacker to monitor conversations happening near a machine that has a microphone. | 2.1 |
1993-09-17 | CVE-1999-1318 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos /usr/5bin/su in SunOS 4.1.3 and earlier uses a search path that includes the current working directory (.), which allows local users to gain privileges via Trojan horse programs. | 7.2 |
1993-02-03 | CVE-1999-1507 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos Sun SunOS 4.1 through 4.1.3 allows local attackers to gain root access via insecure permissions on files and directories such as crash. | 7.2 |
1992-12-30 | CVE-1999-1021 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos 4.1/4.1.1/4.1.2 NFS on SunOS 4.1 through 4.1.2 ignores the high order 16 bits in a 32 bit UID, which allows a local user to gain root access if the lower 16 bits are set to 0, as fixed by the NFS jumbo patch upgrade. | 7.2 |