7 matches found
Ubuntu: Security Advisory (USN-1172-1)
The remote host is missing an update for the SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2011 Greenbone AG Some text descriptions might be excerpted from a referenced sources, and are Copyright C by the respective right holders. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only ifdescription...
Ubuntu 8.04 LTS / 10.04 LTS / 10.10 / 11.04 : logrotate vulnerabilities (USN-1172-1)
It was discovered that logrotate incorrectly handled the creation of new log files. Local users could possibly read log files if they were opened before permissions were in place. This issue only affected Ubuntu 8.04 LTS. CVE-2011-1098 It was discovered that logrotate incorrectly handled certain...
USN-1172-1: logrotate vulnerabilities
It was discovered that logrotate incorrectly handled the creation of new log files. Local users could possibly read log files if they were opened before permissions were in place. This issue only affected Ubuntu 8.04 LTS. CVE-2011-1098 It was discovered that logrotate incorrectly handled certain...
CVE-2011-1548
The default configuration of logrotate on Debian GNU/Linux uses root privileges to process files in directories that permit non-root write access, which allows local users to conduct symlink and hard link attacks by leveraging logrotate's lack of support for untrusted directories, as demonstrated...
CVE-2011-1548
The default configuration of logrotate on Debian GNU/Linux uses root privileges to process files in directories that permit non-root write access, which allows local users to conduct symlink and hard link attacks by leveraging logrotate's lack of support for untrusted directories, as demonstrated...
CVE-2011-1548
CVE-2011-1548 concerns the logrotate utility on Debian-based systems, where the default configuration allows a non-root user to trigger symlink and hard-link attacks by exploiting logrotate’s handling of directories that are writable by non-root users. The underlying issue is the program processi...
CVE-2011-1548
The default configuration of logrotate on Debian GNU/Linux uses root privileges to process files in directories that permit non-root write access, which allows local users to conduct symlink and hard link attacks by leveraging logrotate's lack of support for untrusted directories, as demonstrated...