12 matches found
memblock: Accept allocated memory before use in memblock_double_array()
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DEBIAN-CVE-2025-37960
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: memblock: Accept allocated memory before use in memblockdoublearray When increasing the array size in memblockdoublearray and the slab is not yet available, a call to memblockfindinrange is used to reserve/allocate memory. Howeve...
UBUNTU-CVE-2025-37960
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: memblock: Accept allocated memory before use in memblockdoublearray When increasing the array size in memblockdoublearray and the slab is not yet available, a call to memblockfindinrange is used to reserve/allocate memory. Howeve...
CVE-2020-15211
In TensorFlow Lite before versions 1.15.4, 2.0.3, 2.1.2, 2.2.1 and 2.3.1, saved models in the flatbuffer format use a double indexing scheme: a model has a set of subgraphs, each subgraph has a set of operators and each operator has a set of input/output tensors. The flatbuffer format uses indice...
The vulnerability in the set of Java libraries provided by Google Guava involves unlimited memory allocation in the classes AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering, allowing a hacker to cause a service failure.
The vulnerability in the Java libraries of Google Guava relates to the unlimited memory allocation in the AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes. Exploiting this vulnerability could allow a remote attacker to cause a service failure...
GHSA-MVR2-9PJ6-7W5J Denial of Service in Google Guava
Unbounded memory allocation in Google Guava 11.0 through 24.x before 24.1.1 allows remote attackers to conduct denial of service attacks against servers that depend on this library and deserialize attacker-provided data, because the AtomicDoubleArray class when serialized with Java serialization...
guava: Unbounded memory allocation in AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service
A vulnerability was found in Guava where the AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes were found to allocate memory based on size fields sent by the client without validation. A crafted message could cause the server to consume all available memory or crash leading to a denial of service...
CVE-2019-19847
An off-by-one vulnerability was found in libspiro in the way a double array is first declared in a unit test and then accessed by the library itself. Applications that make use of libspiro in the same way as the example code in the test suite may be vulnerable to this flaw. A remote attacker coul...
guava: Unbounded memory allocation in AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service
A vulnerability was found in Guava where the AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes were found to allocate memory based on size fields sent by the client without validation. A crafted message could cause the server to consume all available memory or crash leading to a denial of service...
guava: Unbounded memory allocation in AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service
A vulnerability was found in Guava where the AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes were found to allocate memory based on size fields sent by the client without validation. A crafted message could cause the server to consume all available memory or crash leading to a denial of service...
guava: Unbounded memory allocation in AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service
A vulnerability was found in Guava where the AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes were found to allocate memory based on size fields sent by the client without validation. A crafted message could cause the server to consume all available memory or crash leading to a denial of service...
guava: Unbounded memory allocation in AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service
A vulnerability was found in Guava where the AtomicDoubleArray and CompoundOrdering classes were found to allocate memory based on size fields sent by the client without validation. A crafted message could cause the server to consume all available memory or crash leading to a denial of service...