7 matches found
SUSE CVE-2018-6551
The malloc implementation in the GNU C Library aka glibc or libc6, from version 2.24 to 2.26 on powerpc, and only in version 2.26 on i386, did not properly handle malloc calls with arguments close to SIZEMAX and could return a pointer to a heap region that is smaller than requested, eventually...
expat: Integer overflow in storeRawNames()
An integer overflow was found in expat. The issue occurs in storeRawNames by abusing the mbuffer expansion logic to allow allocations very close to INTMAX and out-of-bounds heap writes. This flaw can cause a denial of service or potentially arbitrary code execution...
expat: Integer overflow in storeRawNames()
An integer overflow was found in expat. The issue occurs in storeRawNames by abusing the mbuffer expansion logic to allow allocations very close to INTMAX and out-of-bounds heap writes. This flaw can cause a denial of service or potentially arbitrary code execution...
expat: Integer overflow in storeRawNames()
An integer overflow was found in expat. The issue occurs in storeRawNames by abusing the mbuffer expansion logic to allow allocations very close to INTMAX and out-of-bounds heap writes. This flaw can cause a denial of service or potentially arbitrary code execution...
expat: Integer overflow in storeRawNames()
An integer overflow was found in expat. The issue occurs in storeRawNames by abusing the mbuffer expansion logic to allow allocations very close to INTMAX and out-of-bounds heap writes. This flaw can cause a denial of service or potentially arbitrary code execution...
expat: Integer overflow in storeRawNames()
An integer overflow was found in expat. The issue occurs in storeRawNames by abusing the mbuffer expansion logic to allow allocations very close to INTMAX and out-of-bounds heap writes. This flaw can cause a denial of service or potentially arbitrary code execution...
expat: Integer overflow in storeRawNames()
An integer overflow was found in expat. The issue occurs in storeRawNames by abusing the mbuffer expansion logic to allow allocations very close to INTMAX and out-of-bounds heap writes. This flaw can cause a denial of service or potentially arbitrary code execution...