Vulnerabilities > SUN > Sunos > 5.0
DATE | CVE | VULNERABILITY TITLE | RISK |
---|---|---|---|
2000-11-14 | CVE-2000-0844 | Permissions, Privileges, and Access Controls vulnerability in multiple products Some functions that implement the locale subsystem on Unix do not properly cleanse user-injected format strings, which allows local attackers to execute arbitrary commands via functions such as gettext and catopen. | 10.0 |
2000-06-14 | CVE-2000-0471 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Solaris and Sunos Buffer overflow in ufsrestore in Solaris 8 and earlier allows local users to gain root privileges via a long pathname. | 7.2 |
1999-12-31 | CVE-1999-1585 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos 5.0 The (1) rcS and (2) mountall programs in Sun Solaris 2.x, possibly before 2.4, start a privileged shell on the system console if fsck fails while the system is booting, which allows attackers with physical access to gain root privileges. | 7.2 |
1999-06-09 | CVE-2000-0118 | The Red Hat Linux su program does not log failed password guesses if the su process is killed before it times out, which allows local attackers to conduct brute force password guessing. | 7.2 |
1999-05-10 | CVE-1999-0806 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos 5.0 Buffer overflow in Solaris dtprintinfo program. | 7.2 |
1998-05-21 | CVE-1999-0303 | Buffer overflow in BNU UUCP daemon (uucpd) through long hostnames. | 4.6 |
1998-04-29 | CVE-1999-0212 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos 5.0 Solaris rpc.mountd generates error messages that allow a remote attacker to determine what files are on the server. | 7.8 |
1998-04-01 | CVE-1999-0003 | Execute commands as root via buffer overflow in Tooltalk database server (rpc.ttdbserverd). | 10.0 |
1997-06-24 | CVE-1999-1192 | Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Sunos Buffer overflow in eeprom in Solaris 2.5.1 and earlier allows local users to gain root privileges via a long command line argument. | 7.2 |
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 |