apk package
chainguard/knative-eventing-fips-1.19-filter
pkg:apk/chainguard/knative-eventing-fips-1.19-filter
Vulnerabilities (44)
| CVE | Sev | CVSS | KEV | Affected versions | Fixed in | Published | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2026-46598 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | For certain crafted inputs, a 'ed25519.PrivateKey' was created by casting malformed wire bytes, leading to a panic when used. | |
| CVE-2026-46597 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | An incorrectly placed cast from bytes to int allowed for server-side panic in the AES-GCM packet decoder for well-crafted inputs. | |
| CVE-2026-46595 | Cri | 10.0 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | Previously, CVE-2024-45337 fixed an authorization bypass for misused ssh server configurations; if any other type of callback is passed other than public key, then the source-address validation would be skipped. | |
| CVE-2026-39835 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | SSH servers which use CertChecker as a public key callback without setting IsUserAuthority or IsHostAuthority could be caused to panic by a client presenting a certificate. CertChecker now returns an error instead of panicking when these callbacks are nil. | |
| CVE-2026-39834 | Cri | 9.1 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | When writing data larger than 4GB in a single Write call on an SSH channel, an integer overflow in the internal payload size calculation caused the write loop to spin indefinitely, sending empty packets without making progress. The size comparison now uses int64 to prevent trunca | |
| CVE-2026-39833 | Cri | 9.1 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | The in-memory keyring returned by NewKeyring() silently accepted keys with the ConfirmBeforeUse constraint but never enforced it. The key would sign without any confirmation prompt, with no indication to the caller that the constraint was not in effect. NewKeyring() now returns a | |
| CVE-2026-39832 | Cri | 9.1 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | When adding a key to a remote agent constraint extensions such as restrict-destination-v00@openssh.com were not serialized in the request. Destination restrictions were silently stripped when forwarding keys, allowing unrestricted use of the key on the remote host. The client now | |
| CVE-2026-39831 | Cri | 9.1 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | The Verify() method for FIDO/U2F security key types (sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com, sk-ssh-ed25519@openssh.com) did not check the User Presence flag. Signatures generated without physical touch were accepted, allowing unattended use of a hardware security key. To restore the | |
| CVE-2026-39830 | Cri | 9.1 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | A malicious SSH peer could send unsolicited global request responses to fill an internal buffer, blocking the connection's read loop. The blocked goroutine could not be released by calling Close(), resulting in a resource leak per connection. Unsolicited global responses are now | |
| CVE-2026-39829 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | The RSA and DSA public key parsers did not enforce size limits on key parameters. A crafted public key with an excessively large modulus or DSA parameter could cause several minutes of CPU consumption during signature verification. This could be triggered by unauthenticated clien | |
| CVE-2026-39828 | Med | 6.3 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | When an SSH server authentication callback returned PartialSuccessError with non-nil Permissions, those permissions were silently discarded, potentially dropping certificate restrictions such as force-command after a second factor succeeded. Returning non-nil Permissions with Par | |
| CVE-2026-39827 | Med | 6.5 | < 1.19.8-r10 | 1.19.8-r10 | May 22, 2026 | An authenticated SSH client that repeatedly opened channels which were rejected by the server caused unbounded memory growth, eventually crashing the server process and affecting all connected users. Rejected channels are now properly removed from the connection's internal state | |
| CVE-2026-42501 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.19.8-r9 | 1.19.8-r9 | May 7, 2026 | A malicious module proxy can exploit a flaw in the go command's validation of module checksums to bypass checksum database validation. This vulnerability affects any user using an untrusted module proxy (GOMODPROXY) or checksum database (GOSUMDB). A malicious module proxy can ser | |
| CVE-2026-42499 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.19.8-r9 | 1.19.8-r9 | May 7, 2026 | Pathological inputs could cause DoS through consumePhrase when parsing an email address according to RFC 5322. | |
| CVE-2026-39836 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.19.8-r9 | 1.19.8-r9 | May 7, 2026 | The Dial and LookupPort functions panic on Windows when provided with an input containing a NUL (0). | |
| CVE-2026-39826 | Med | 6.1 | < 1.19.8-r9 | 1.19.8-r9 | May 7, 2026 | If a trusted template author were to write a tag containing an empty 'type' attribute or a 'type' attribute with an ASCII whitespace, the execution of the template would incorrectly escape any data passed into the block. | |
| CVE-2026-39825 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.19.8-r9 | 1.19.8-r9 | May 7, 2026 | ReverseProxy can forward queries containing parameters not visible to Rewrite functions. When used with a Rewrite function, or a Director function which parses query parameters, ReverseProxy sanitizes the forwarded request to remove query parameters which are not parsed by url.Pa | |
| CVE-2026-39823 | Med | 6.1 | < 1.19.8-r9 | 1.19.8-r9 | May 7, 2026 | CVE-2026-27142 fixed a vulnerability in which URLs were not correctly escaped inside of a tag's attribute. If the URL content were to insert ASCII whitespaces around the '=' rune inside of the attribute, the escaper would fail to similarly escape it, le | |
| CVE-2026-39820 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.19.8-r9 | 1.19.8-r9 | May 7, 2026 | Well-crafted inputs reaching ParseAddress, ParseAddressList, and ParseDate were able to trigger excessive CPU exhaustion and memory allocations. | |
| CVE-2026-39819 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.19.8-r9 | 1.19.8-r9 | May 7, 2026 | The "go bug" command writes to two files with predictable names in the system temporary directory (for example, "/tmp"). An attacker with access to the temporary directory can create a symlink in one of these names, causing "go bug" to overwrite the target of the symlink. |
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
For certain crafted inputs, a 'ed25519.PrivateKey' was created by casting malformed wire bytes, leading to a panic when used.
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
An incorrectly placed cast from bytes to int allowed for server-side panic in the AES-GCM packet decoder for well-crafted inputs.
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
Previously, CVE-2024-45337 fixed an authorization bypass for misused ssh server configurations; if any other type of callback is passed other than public key, then the source-address validation would be skipped.
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
SSH servers which use CertChecker as a public key callback without setting IsUserAuthority or IsHostAuthority could be caused to panic by a client presenting a certificate. CertChecker now returns an error instead of panicking when these callbacks are nil.
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
When writing data larger than 4GB in a single Write call on an SSH channel, an integer overflow in the internal payload size calculation caused the write loop to spin indefinitely, sending empty packets without making progress. The size comparison now uses int64 to prevent trunca
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
The in-memory keyring returned by NewKeyring() silently accepted keys with the ConfirmBeforeUse constraint but never enforced it. The key would sign without any confirmation prompt, with no indication to the caller that the constraint was not in effect. NewKeyring() now returns a
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
When adding a key to a remote agent constraint extensions such as restrict-destination-v00@openssh.com were not serialized in the request. Destination restrictions were silently stripped when forwarding keys, allowing unrestricted use of the key on the remote host. The client now
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
The Verify() method for FIDO/U2F security key types (sk-ecdsa-sha2-nistp256@openssh.com, sk-ssh-ed25519@openssh.com) did not check the User Presence flag. Signatures generated without physical touch were accepted, allowing unattended use of a hardware security key. To restore the
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
A malicious SSH peer could send unsolicited global request responses to fill an internal buffer, blocking the connection's read loop. The blocked goroutine could not be released by calling Close(), resulting in a resource leak per connection. Unsolicited global responses are now
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
The RSA and DSA public key parsers did not enforce size limits on key parameters. A crafted public key with an excessively large modulus or DSA parameter could cause several minutes of CPU consumption during signature verification. This could be triggered by unauthenticated clien
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
When an SSH server authentication callback returned PartialSuccessError with non-nil Permissions, those permissions were silently discarded, potentially dropping certificate restrictions such as force-command after a second factor succeeded. Returning non-nil Permissions with Par
- affected < 1.19.8-r10fixed 1.19.8-r10
An authenticated SSH client that repeatedly opened channels which were rejected by the server caused unbounded memory growth, eventually crashing the server process and affecting all connected users. Rejected channels are now properly removed from the connection's internal state
- affected < 1.19.8-r9fixed 1.19.8-r9
A malicious module proxy can exploit a flaw in the go command's validation of module checksums to bypass checksum database validation. This vulnerability affects any user using an untrusted module proxy (GOMODPROXY) or checksum database (GOSUMDB). A malicious module proxy can ser
- affected < 1.19.8-r9fixed 1.19.8-r9
Pathological inputs could cause DoS through consumePhrase when parsing an email address according to RFC 5322.
- affected < 1.19.8-r9fixed 1.19.8-r9
The Dial and LookupPort functions panic on Windows when provided with an input containing a NUL (0).
- affected < 1.19.8-r9fixed 1.19.8-r9
If a trusted template author were to write a tag containing an empty 'type' attribute or a 'type' attribute with an ASCII whitespace, the execution of the template would incorrectly escape any data passed into the block.
- affected < 1.19.8-r9fixed 1.19.8-r9
ReverseProxy can forward queries containing parameters not visible to Rewrite functions. When used with a Rewrite function, or a Director function which parses query parameters, ReverseProxy sanitizes the forwarded request to remove query parameters which are not parsed by url.Pa
- affected < 1.19.8-r9fixed 1.19.8-r9
CVE-2026-27142 fixed a vulnerability in which URLs were not correctly escaped inside of a tag's attribute. If the URL content were to insert ASCII whitespaces around the '=' rune inside of the attribute, the escaper would fail to similarly escape it, le
- affected < 1.19.8-r9fixed 1.19.8-r9
Well-crafted inputs reaching ParseAddress, ParseAddressList, and ParseDate were able to trigger excessive CPU exhaustion and memory allocations.
- affected < 1.19.8-r9fixed 1.19.8-r9
The "go bug" command writes to two files with predictable names in the system temporary directory (for example, "/tmp"). An attacker with access to the temporary directory can create a symlink in one of these names, causing "go bug" to overwrite the target of the symlink.
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