Search Results (64 CVEs found)

CVE Vendors Products Updated CVSS v3.1
CVE-2020-8286 9 Apple, Debian, Fedoraproject and 6 more 22 Mac Os X, Macos, Debian Linux and 19 more 2024-11-21 7.5 High
curl 7.41.0 through 7.73.0 is vulnerable to an improper check for certificate revocation due to insufficient verification of the OCSP response.
CVE-2020-8231 6 Debian, Haxx, Oracle and 3 more 6 Debian Linux, Libcurl, Communications Cloud Native Core Policy and 3 more 2024-11-21 7.5 High
Due to use of a dangling pointer, libcurl 7.29.0 through 7.71.1 can use the wrong connection when sending data.
CVE-2018-1000005 4 Canonical, Debian, Haxx and 1 more 4 Ubuntu Linux, Debian Linux, Libcurl and 1 more 2024-11-21 N/A
libcurl 7.49.0 to and including 7.57.0 contains an out bounds read in code handling HTTP/2 trailers. It was reported (https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/2231) that reading an HTTP/2 trailer could mess up future trailers since the stored size was one byte less than required. The problem is that the code that creates HTTP/1-like headers from the HTTP/2 trailer data once appended a string like `:` to the target buffer, while this was recently changed to `: ` (a space was added after the colon) but the following math wasn't updated correspondingly. When accessed, the data is read out of bounds and causes either a crash or that the (too large) data gets passed to client write. This could lead to a denial-of-service situation or an information disclosure if someone has a service that echoes back or uses the trailers for something.
CVE-2017-7468 1 Haxx 1 Libcurl 2024-11-21 N/A
In curl and libcurl 7.52.0 to and including 7.53.1, libcurl would attempt to resume a TLS session even if the client certificate had changed. That is unacceptable since a server by specification is allowed to skip the client certificate check on resume, and may instead use the old identity which was established by the previous certificate (or no certificate). libcurl supports by default the use of TLS session id/ticket to resume previous TLS sessions to speed up subsequent TLS handshakes. They are used when for any reason an existing TLS connection couldn't be kept alive to make the next handshake faster. This flaw is a regression and identical to CVE-2016-5419 reported on August 3rd 2016, but affecting a different version range.