apk package
chainguard/datadog-agent-7.72-full
pkg:apk/chainguard/datadog-agent-7.72-full
Vulnerabilities (27)
| CVE | Sev | CVSS | KEV | Affected versions | Fixed in | Published | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2026-39817 | Med | 5.9 | < 7.72.4-r22 | 7.72.4-r22 | May 7, 2026 | The "go tool pack" subcommand (usually used only by the compiler as an internal tool with known-good inputs) does not sanitize output filenames. Extracting a malicious archive file with the "pack" subcommand can write files to arbitrary locations on the filesystem. | |
| CVE-2026-33814 | Hig | 7.5 | < 7.72.4-r23 | 7.72.4-r23 | May 7, 2026 | When processing HTTP/2 SETTINGS frames, transport will enter an infinite loop of writing CONTINUATION frames if it receives a SETTINGS_MAX_FRAME_SIZE with a value of 0. | |
| CVE-2026-33811 | Hig | 7.5 | < 7.72.4-r22 | 7.72.4-r22 | May 7, 2026 | When using LookupCNAME with the cgo DNS resolver, a very long CNAME response can trigger a double-free of C memory and a crash. | |
| CVE-2026-39883 | Hig | 7.0 | < 7.72.4-r29 | 7.72.4-r29 | Apr 8, 2026 | OpenTelemetry-Go is the Go implementation of OpenTelemetry. From 1.15.0 to 1.42.0, the fix for CVE-2026-24051 changed the Darwin ioreg command to use an absolute path but left the BSD kenv command using a bare name, allowing the same PATH hijacking attack on BSD and Solaris platf | |
| CVE-2026-39882 | Med | 5.3 | < 7.72.4-r29 | 7.72.4-r29 | Apr 8, 2026 | OpenTelemetry-Go is the Go implementation of OpenTelemetry. Prior to 1.43.0, the otlp HTTP exporters (traces/metrics/logs) read the full HTTP response body into an in-memory bytes.Buffer without a size cap. This is exploitable for memory exhaustion when the configured collector e | |
| CVE-2026-32287 | Hig | 7.5 | < 7.72.4-r20 | 7.72.4-r20 | Mar 26, 2026 | Boolean XPath expressions that evaluate to true can cause an infinite loop in logicalQuery.Select, leading to 100% CPU usage. This can be triggered by top-level selectors such as "1=1" or "true()". | |
| CVE-2025-68156 | — | < 7.72.4-r21 | 7.72.4-r21 | Dec 16, 2025 | Expr is an expression language and expression evaluation for Go. Prior to version 1.17.7, several builtin functions in Expr, including `flatten`, `min`, `max`, `mean`, and `median`, perform recursive traversal over user-provided data structures without enforcing a maximum recursi |
- affected < 7.72.4-r22fixed 7.72.4-r22
The "go tool pack" subcommand (usually used only by the compiler as an internal tool with known-good inputs) does not sanitize output filenames. Extracting a malicious archive file with the "pack" subcommand can write files to arbitrary locations on the filesystem.
- affected < 7.72.4-r23fixed 7.72.4-r23
When processing HTTP/2 SETTINGS frames, transport will enter an infinite loop of writing CONTINUATION frames if it receives a SETTINGS_MAX_FRAME_SIZE with a value of 0.
- affected < 7.72.4-r22fixed 7.72.4-r22
When using LookupCNAME with the cgo DNS resolver, a very long CNAME response can trigger a double-free of C memory and a crash.
- affected < 7.72.4-r29fixed 7.72.4-r29
OpenTelemetry-Go is the Go implementation of OpenTelemetry. From 1.15.0 to 1.42.0, the fix for CVE-2026-24051 changed the Darwin ioreg command to use an absolute path but left the BSD kenv command using a bare name, allowing the same PATH hijacking attack on BSD and Solaris platf
- affected < 7.72.4-r29fixed 7.72.4-r29
OpenTelemetry-Go is the Go implementation of OpenTelemetry. Prior to 1.43.0, the otlp HTTP exporters (traces/metrics/logs) read the full HTTP response body into an in-memory bytes.Buffer without a size cap. This is exploitable for memory exhaustion when the configured collector e
- affected < 7.72.4-r20fixed 7.72.4-r20
Boolean XPath expressions that evaluate to true can cause an infinite loop in logicalQuery.Select, leading to 100% CPU usage. This can be triggered by top-level selectors such as "1=1" or "true()".
- CVE-2025-68156Dec 16, 2025affected < 7.72.4-r21fixed 7.72.4-r21
Expr is an expression language and expression evaluation for Go. Prior to version 1.17.7, several builtin functions in Expr, including `flatten`, `min`, `max`, `mean`, and `median`, perform recursive traversal over user-provided data structures without enforcing a maximum recursi
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