8 matches found
[SECURITY] Fedora 35 Update: q-7.11-44.fc35
Q is a powerful and extensible functional programming language based on the term rewriting calculus. You specify an arbitrary system of equations which the interpreter uses as rewrite rules to reduce expressions to normal form. Q is useful for scientific programming and other advanced application...
Security Bulletin: IBM® DB2® contains a file disclosure vulnerability using a SELECT statement with XML/XSLT function (CVE-2014-8910)
Summary IBM DB2 contains a file disclosure vulnerability. A remote, authenticated DB2 user could exploit this vulnerability by executing a specially-crafted SELECT statement with XML/XSLT function to read arbitrary text files owned by the DB2 instance owner. On Windows, the attacker is able to re...
[SECURITY] Fedora 25 Update: q-7.11-29.fc25
Q is a powerful and extensible functional programming language based on the term rewriting calculus. You specify an arbitrary system of equations which the interpreter uses as rewrite rules to reduce expressions to normal form. Q is useful for scientific programming and other advanced application...
IBM DB2 10.1 < Fix Pack 5 / 10.5 < Fix Pack 6 Multiple Vulnerabilities
Binary data 9199.prm...
Code injection
IBM DB2 9.7 through FP10, 9.8 through FP5, 10.1 before FP5, and 10.5 through FP5 on Linux, UNIX, and Windows allows remote authenticated users to read arbitrary text files via a crafted XML/XSLT function in a SELECT statement...
CVE-2014-8910
IBM DB2 9.7 through FP10, 9.8 through FP5, 10.1 before FP5, and 10.5 through FP5 on Linux, UNIX, and Windows allows remote authenticated users to read arbitrary text files via a crafted XML/XSLT function in a SELECT statement...
CVE-2014-8910
IBM DB2 9.7 through FP10, 9.8 through FP5, 10.1 before FP5, and 10.5 through FP5 on Linux, UNIX, and Windows allows remote authenticated users to read arbitrary text files via a crafted XML/XSLT function in a SELECT statement...
CVE-2014-8910
IBM DB2 9.7 through FP10, 9.8 through FP5, 10.1 before FP5, and 10.5 through FP5 on Linux, UNIX, and Windows allows remote authenticated users to read arbitrary text files via a crafted XML/XSLT function in a SELECT statement...