11 matches found
Oracle Linux 8 : emacs (ELSA-2023-7083)
The remote Oracle Linux 8 host has packages installed that are affected by multiple vulnerabilities as referenced in the ELSA-2023-7083 advisory. 1:26.1-11 - Bump version Tenable has extracted the preceding description block directly from the Oracle Linux security advisory. Note that Nessus has n...
MGASA-2023-0081 Updated emacs packages fix security vulnerability
GNU Emacs through 28.2 allows attackers to execute commands via shell metacharacters in the name of a source-code file, because lib-src/etags.c uses the system C library function in its implementation of the etags program. For example, a victim may use the "etags -u " command suggested in the eta...
GNU Emacs through 28.2 allows attackers to execute commands via shell metacharacters in the name of a source-code file because lib-src/etags.c uses the system C library function in its implementation of the etags program. For example a victim may use the "etags -u *" command (suggested in the etags documentation) in a situation where the current working directory has contents that depend on untrusted input.
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CVE-2022-48337
GNU Emacs through 28.2 allows attackers to execute commands via shell metacharacters in the name of a source-code file, because lib-src/etags.c uses the system C library function in its implementation of the etags program. For example, a victim may use the "etags -u " command suggested in the eta...
DEBIAN-CVE-2022-48337
GNU Emacs through 28.2 allows attackers to execute commands via shell metacharacters in the name of a source-code file, because lib-src/etags.c uses the system C library function in its implementation of the etags program. For example, a victim may use the "etags -u " command suggested in the eta...
CVE-2022-48337
GNU Emacs through 28.2 allows attackers to execute commands via shell metacharacters in the name of a source-code file, because lib-src/etags.c uses the system C library function in its implementation of the etags program. For example, a victim may use the "etags -u " command suggested in the eta...
Input validation
GNU Emacs through 28.2 allows attackers to execute commands via shell metacharacters in the name of a source-code file, because lib-src/etags.c uses the system C library function in its implementation of the etags program. For example, a victim may use the "etags -u " command suggested in the eta...
CVE-2022-48337
GNU Emacs through 28.2 allows attackers to execute commands via shell metacharacters in the name of a source-code file, because lib-src/etags.c uses the system C library function in its implementation of the etags program. For example, a victim may use the "etags -u " command suggested in the eta...
UBUNTU-CVE-2022-48337
GNU Emacs through 28.2 allows attackers to execute commands via shell metacharacters in the name of a source-code file, because lib-src/etags.c uses the system C library function in its implementation of the etags program. For example, a victim may use the "etags -u " command suggested in the eta...
CVE-2022-48337
GNU Emacs through 28.2 allows attackers to execute commands via shell metacharacters in the name of a source-code file, because lib-src/etags.c uses the system C library function in its implementation of the etags program. For example, a victim may use the "etags -u " command suggested in the eta...
CVE-2022-48337
CVE-2022-48337 affects GNU Emacs up to 28.2. The issue arises from the etags implementation in lib-src/etags.c, which uses the system C library function and does not sanitize input, enabling command execution via shell metacharacters in source-file names (for example, using etags -u * in a direct...