Vulnerabilities > SUN > Sunos > 5.5

DATE CVE VULNERABILITY TITLE RISK
1997-10-01 CVE-1999-0295 Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Solaris and Sunos
Solaris sysdef command allows local users to read kernel memory, potentially leading to root privileges.
local
low complexity
sun
7.2
1997-10-01 CVE-1999-0185 Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Solaris and Sunos
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.
network
low complexity
sun
7.5
1997-08-13 CVE-1999-0024 DNS cache poisoning via BIND, by predictable query IDs.
network
low complexity
isc sco sun nec ibm bsdi
5.0
1997-08-01 CVE-1999-0301 Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Solaris and Sunos
Buffer overflow in SunOS/Solaris ps command.
local
low complexity
sun
7.2
1997-06-26 CVE-1999-1423 Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Solaris and Sunos
ping in Solaris 2.3 through 2.6 allows local users to cause a denial of service (crash) via a ping request to a multicast address through the loopback interface, e.g.
local
low complexity
sun
2.1
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.
local
low complexity
sun
7.2
1997-06-12 CVE-1999-0033 Command execution in Sun systems via buffer overflow in the at program.
local
low complexity
ncr sgi sco sun ibm
7.2
1997-06-04 CVE-1999-0189 Unspecified vulnerability in SUN Solaris and Sunos
Solaris rpcbind listens on a high numbered UDP port, which may not be filtered since the standard port number is 111.
network
low complexity
sun
7.5
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.
local
low complexity
sun
7.2
1997-05-17 CVE-1999-1402 The access permissions for a UNIX domain socket are ignored in Solaris 2.x and SunOS 4.x, and other BSD-based operating systems before 4.4, which could allow local users to connect to the socket and possibly disrupt or control the operations of the program using that socket.
local
low complexity
freebsd sun
2.1