Fedora SSSD - System Security Services Daemon 1.2.2

CPE Details

Fedora SSSD - System Security Services Daemon 1.2.2
1.2.2
2010-08-31
14h04 +00:00
2011-06-30
13h06 +00:00
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CPE Name: cpe:2.3:a:fedoraproject:sssd:1.2.2:*:*:*:*:*:*:*

Informations

Vendor

fedoraproject

Product

sssd

Version

1.2.2

Related CVE

Open and find in CVE List

CVE ID Published Description Score Severity
CVE-2019-3811 2019-01-15 15h00 +00:00 A vulnerability was found in sssd. If a user was configured with no home directory set, sssd would return '/' (the root directory) instead of '' (the empty string / no home directory). This could impact services that restrict the user's filesystem access to within their home directory through chroot() etc. All versions before 2.1 are vulnerable.
5.2
Medium
CVE-2017-12173 2018-07-27 14h00 +00:00 It was found that sssd's sysdb_search_user_by_upn_res() function before 1.16.0 did not sanitize requests when querying its local cache and was vulnerable to injection. In a centralized login environment, if a password hash was locally cached for a given user, an authenticated attacker could use this flaw to retrieve it.
8.8
High
CVE-2018-10852 2018-06-26 12h00 +00:00 The UNIX pipe which sudo uses to contact SSSD and read the available sudo rules from SSSD has too wide permissions, which means that anyone who can send a message using the same raw protocol that sudo and SSSD use can read the sudo rules available for any user. This affects versions of SSSD before 1.16.3.
7.5
High
CVE-2013-0220 2013-02-24 19h00 +00:00 The (1) sss_autofs_cmd_getautomntent and (2) sss_autofs_cmd_getautomntbyname function in responder/autofs/autofssrv_cmd.c and the (3) ssh_cmd_parse_request function in responder/ssh/sshsrv_cmd.c in System Security Services Daemon (SSSD) before 1.9.4 allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service (out-of-bounds read, crash, and restart) via a crafted SSSD packet.
5
CVE-2013-0219 2013-02-24 18h00 +00:00 System Security Services Daemon (SSSD) before 1.9.4, when (1) creating, (2) copying, or (3) removing a user home directory tree, allows local users to create, modify, or delete arbitrary files via a symlink attack on another user's files.
3.7