Mansour Gashasbi discovered that libcdio incorrectly handled certain
memory operations when parsing an ISO file, leading to a buffer overflow
vulnerability. An attacker could use this to cause a denial of service
or possibly execute arbitrary code.
OS | Version | Architecture | Package | Version | Filename |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libcdio++1t64 | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libcdio++-dev | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libcdio++1t64-dbgsym | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libcdio-dev | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libcdio-utils | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libcdio-utils-dbgsym | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libcdio19t64 | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libcdio19t64-dbgsym | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libiso9660++-dev | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |
Ubuntu | 24.04 | noarch | libiso9660++0t64 | < 2.1.0-4.1ubuntu1.2 | UNKNOWN |