11 matches found
EUVD-2004-1735
Malware in sbrugna...
EUVD-2004-1734
Malware in sbrugna...
Music Daemon File Disclosure
The remote host is running MusicDaemon, a music player running as a server. It is possible to cause the Music Daemon to disclose the content of arbitrary files by inserting them to the list of tracks to listen to. An attacker can list the content of arbitrary files including the /etc/shadow file,...
Music Daemon Denial of Service
It is possible to cause the Music Daemon to stop responding to requests by causing it to load the /dev/random filename as its track list. SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2004 Noam Rathaus Some text descriptions might be excerpted from a referenced sources, and are Copyright C by the respective right...
Music Daemon <= 0.0.3 File Disclosure Vulnerability
Music Daemon is prone to a file disclosure vulnerability. SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2004 Noam Rathaus 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...
CVE-2004-1740
Music daemon musicd 0.0.3 and earlier allows remote attackers to read arbitrary files by calling LOAD with a full pathname, then calling SHOWLIST...
CVE-2004-1741
CVE-2004-1741 affects Music Daemon (musicd) up to version 0.0.3. The vulnerability allows remote attackers to crash the server by calling LOAD with a binary file as the argument and then calling SHOWLIST. OpenVAS confirms a DoS condition where loading the /dev/random filename as the track list ca...
CVE-2004-1741
Music daemon musicd 0.0.3 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service crash by calling LOAD with a binary file as an argument, then calling SHOWLIST...
CVE-2004-1740
Music Daemon (musicd)
CVE-2004-1741
Music daemon musicd 0.0.3 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service crash by calling LOAD with a binary file as an argument, then calling SHOWLIST...
CVE-2004-1740
Music daemon musicd 0.0.3 and earlier allows remote attackers to read arbitrary files by calling LOAD with a full pathname, then calling SHOWLIST...