7 matches found
Linux Distros Unpatched Vulnerability : CVE-2025-38181
The Linux/Unix host has one or more packages installed that are impacted by a vulnerability without a vendor supplied patch available. - calipso: Fix null-ptr-deref in calipsoreqset,delattr. syzkaller reported a null-ptr-deref in sockomalloc while allocating a CALIPSO option. 0 The NULL is of...
kernel: TCP-spoofed ghost ACKs and leak leak initial sequence number
A flaw was found in the Linux kernel. Two TCP spoofing primitives exist where an attacker can brute force the server-chosen send window by acknowledging data that was never sent, called "ghost ACKs." There are side channels that also allow the attacker to leak the otherwise secret server-chosen...
kernel: TCP-spoofed ghost ACKs and leak leak initial sequence number
A flaw was found in the Linux kernel. Two TCP spoofing primitives exist where an attacker can brute force the server-chosen send window by acknowledging data that was never sent, called "ghost ACKs." There are side channels that also allow the attacker to leak the otherwise secret server-chosen...
SUSE CVE-2017-5972
The TCP stack in the Linux kernel 3.x does not properly implement a SYN cookie protection mechanism for the case of a fast network connection, which allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service CPU consumption by sending many TCP SYN packets, as demonstrated by an attack against the...
CVE-2018-5512
On F5 BIG-IP 13.1.0-13.1.0.5, when Large Receive Offload LRO and SYN cookies are enabled default settings, undisclosed traffic patterns may cause TMM to restart...
Denial of Service Vulnerability in Multiple F5 Products (CNVD-2018-10113)
F5 BIG-IP LTM, etc. are products of F5 Corporation, U.S.A. F5 BIG-IP LTM is a local traffic manager; BIG-IP AAM is an application acceleration manager. A security vulnerability exists in several F5 products. When Large Receive Offload and SYN cookies are turned on, an attacker can exploit the...
The vulnerability of the Linux operating system’s TCP stack allows a hacker to induce a service failure.
The vulnerability of the Linux operating system’s TCP stack exists due to errors in the SYN cookie mechanism. Exploiting this vulnerability allows a remote attacker to cause a service failure resulting in increased computational resources usage through the use of specially crafted SYN packets...