7 matches found
SUSE CVE-2024-47733
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: netfs: Delete subtree of 'fs/netfs' when netfs module exits In netfsinit or fscacheprocinit, we create dentry under 'fs/netfs', but in netfsexit, we only delete the proc entry of 'fs/netfs' without deleting its subtree. This...
CVE-2024-47733
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: netfs: Delete subtree of 'fs/netfs' when netfs module exits In netfsinit or fscacheprocinit, we create dentry under 'fs/netfs', but in netfsexit, we only delete the proc entry of 'fs/netfs' without deleting its subtree. This...
UBUNTU-CVE-2024-47733
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: netfs: Delete subtree of 'fs/netfs' when netfs module exits In netfsinit or fscacheprocinit, we create dentry under 'fs/netfs', but in netfsexit, we only delete the proc entry of 'fs/netfs' without deleting its subtree. This...
CVE-2024-47733
In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved: netfs: Delete subtree of 'fs/netfs' when netfs module exits In netfsinit or fscacheprocinit, we create dentry under 'fs/netfs', but in netfsexit, we only delete the proc entry of 'fs/netfs' without deleting its subtree. This...
DEBIAN-CVE-2022-42321
Xenstore: Guests can crash xenstored via exhausting the stack Xenstored is using recursion for some Xenstore operations e.g. for deleting a sub-tree of Xenstore nodes. With sufficiently deep nesting levels this can result in stack exhaustion on xenstored, leading to a crash of xenstored...
ALPINE-CVE-2022-42321
Xenstore: Guests can crash xenstored via exhausting the stack Xenstored is using recursion for some Xenstore operations e.g. for deleting a sub-tree of Xenstore nodes. With sufficiently deep nesting levels this can result in stack exhaustion on xenstored, leading to a crash of xenstored...
UBUNTU-CVE-2022-42321
Xenstore: Guests can crash xenstored via exhausting the stack Xenstored is using recursion for some Xenstore operations e.g. for deleting a sub-tree of Xenstore nodes. With sufficiently deep nesting levels this can result in stack exhaustion on xenstored, leading to a crash of xenstored...