8 matches found
Intel Xeon 6 Processor 安全漏洞
Intel Xeon 6 Processor is a family of chips from Intel Corporation USA. A security vulnerability exists in Intel Xeon 6 Processor that stems from improper handling of overlapping protected memory ranges, which could lead to elevation of privilege...
SUSE CVE-2022-37416
Ittiam libmpeg2 before 2022-07-27 uses memcpy with overlapping memory blocks in impeg2mcfullxfully8x8...
CVE-2022-37416
Ittiam libmpeg2 before 2022-07-27 uses memcpy with overlapping memory blocks in impeg2mcfullxfully8x8...
CVE-2021-26843
An issue was discovered in sthttpd through 2.27.1. On systems where the strcpy function is implemented with memcpy, the dedotdot function may cause a Denial-of-Service daemon crash due to overlapping memory ranges being passed to memcpy. This can triggered with an HTTP GET request for a crafted...
CVE-2017-18269
An SSE2-optimized memmove implementation for i386 in sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/memcpy-sse2-unaligned.S in the GNU C Library aka glibc or libc6 2.21 through 2.27 does not correctly perform the overlapping memory check if the source memory range spans the middle of the address space, resulting in...
CVE-2017-18269
An SSE2-optimized memmove implementation for i386 in sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/memcpy-sse2-unaligned.S in the GNU C Library aka glibc or libc6 2.21 through 2.27 does not correctly perform the overlapping memory check if the source memory range spans the middle of the address space, resulting in...
CVE-2017-18269
An SSE2-optimized memmove implementation for i386 in sysdeps/i386/i686/multiarch/memcpy-sse2-unaligned.S in the GNU C Library aka glibc or libc6 2.21 through 2.27 does not correctly perform the overlapping memory check if the source memory range spans the middle of the address space, resulting in...
security flaw
The 64 bit ELF support in Linux kernel 2.6 before 2.6.10, on 64-bit architectures, does not properly check for overlapping VMA virtual memory address allocations, which allows local users to cause a denial of service system crash or execute arbitrary code via a crafted ELF or a.out file...