apk package
wolfi/velero-plugin-for-microsoft-azure
pkg:apk/wolfi/velero-plugin-for-microsoft-azure
Vulnerabilities (53)
| CVE | Sev | CVSS | KEV | Affected versions | Fixed in | Published | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2026-32282 | Med | 6.4 | < 0 | 0 | Apr 8, 2026 | On Linux, if the target of Root.Chmod is replaced with a symlink while the chmod operation is in progress, Chmod can operate on the target of the symlink, even when the target lies outside the root. The Linux fchmodat syscall silently ignores the AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW flag, which R | |
| CVE-2026-32281 | Hig | 7.5 | < 0 | 0 | Apr 8, 2026 | Validating certificate chains which use policies is unexpectedly inefficient when certificates in the chain contain a very large number of policy mappings, possibly causing denial of service. This only affects validation of otherwise trusted certificate chains, issued by a root C | |
| CVE-2026-32280 | Hig | 7.5 | < 0 | 0 | Apr 8, 2026 | During chain building, the amount of work that is done is not correctly limited when a large number of intermediate certificates are passed in VerifyOptions.Intermediates, which can lead to a denial of service. This affects both direct users of crypto/x509 and users of crypto/tls | |
| CVE-2026-27140 | Hig | 8.8 | < 1.14.0-r6 | 1.14.0-r6 | Apr 8, 2026 | SWIG file names containing 'cgo' and well-crafted payloads could lead to code smuggling and arbitrary code execution at build time due to trust layer bypass. | |
| CVE-2026-33186 | Cri | 9.1 | < 1.14.0-r2 | 1.14.0-r2 | Mar 20, 2026 | gRPC-Go is the Go language implementation of gRPC. Versions prior to 1.79.3 have an authorization bypass resulting from improper input validation of the HTTP/2 `:path` pseudo-header. The gRPC-Go server was too lenient in its routing logic, accepting requests where the `:path` omi | |
| CVE-2025-68121 | Cri | 10.0 | < 0 | 0 | Feb 5, 2026 | During session resumption in crypto/tls, if the underlying Config has its ClientCAs or RootCAs fields mutated between the initial handshake and the resumed handshake, the resumed handshake may succeed when it should have failed. This may happen when a user calls Config.Clone and | |
| CVE-2025-61732 | — | < 1.13.2-r2 | 1.13.2-r2 | Feb 5, 2026 | A discrepancy between how Go and C/C++ comments were parsed allowed for code smuggling into the resulting cgo binary. | ||
| CVE-2025-58181 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.13.1-r1 | 1.13.1-r1 | Nov 19, 2025 | SSH servers parsing GSSAPI authentication requests do not validate the number of mechanisms specified in the request, allowing an attacker to cause unbounded memory consumption. | |
| CVE-2025-47914 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.13.1-r1 | 1.13.1-r1 | Nov 19, 2025 | SSH Agent servers do not validate the size of messages when processing new identity requests, which may cause the program to panic if the message is malformed due to an out of bounds read. | |
| CVE-2025-61725 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | The ParseAddress function constructs domain-literal address components through repeated string concatenation. When parsing large domain-literal components, this can cause excessive CPU consumption. | |
| CVE-2025-61724 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | The Reader.ReadResponse function constructs a response string through repeated string concatenation of lines. When the number of lines in a response is large, this can cause excessive CPU consumption. | |
| CVE-2025-61723 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | The processing time for parsing some invalid inputs scales non-linearly with respect to the size of the input. This affects programs which parse untrusted PEM inputs. | |
| CVE-2025-58189 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | When Conn.Handshake fails during ALPN negotiation the error contains attacker controlled information (the ALPN protocols sent by the client) which is not escaped. | |
| CVE-2025-58188 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | Validating certificate chains which contain DSA public keys can cause programs to panic, due to a interface cast that assumes they implement the Equal method. This affects programs which validate arbitrary certificate chains. | |
| CVE-2025-58187 | Hig | 7.5 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | Due to the design of the name constraint checking algorithm, the processing time of some inputs scale non-linearly with respect to the size of the certificate. This affects programs which validate arbitrary certificate chains. | |
| CVE-2025-58186 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | Despite HTTP headers having a default limit of 1MB, the number of cookies that can be parsed does not have a limit. By sending a lot of very small cookies such as "a=;", an attacker can make an HTTP server allocate a large amount of structs, causing large memory consumption. | |
| CVE-2025-58185 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | Parsing a maliciously crafted DER payload could allocate large amounts of memory, causing memory exhaustion. | |
| CVE-2025-58183 | Med | 4.3 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | tar.Reader does not set a maximum size on the number of sparse region data blocks in GNU tar pax 1.0 sparse files. A maliciously-crafted archive containing a large number of sparse regions can cause a Reader to read an unbounded amount of data from the archive into memory. When r | |
| CVE-2025-47912 | Med | 5.3 | < 1.13.0-r1 | 1.13.0-r1 | Oct 29, 2025 | The Parse function permits values other than IPv6 addresses to be included in square brackets within the host component of a URL. RFC 3986 permits IPv6 addresses to be included within the host component, enclosed within square brackets. For example: "http://[::1]/". IPv4 addresse | |
| CVE-2025-47907 | Hig | 7.0 | < 0 | 0 | Aug 7, 2025 | Cancelling a query (e.g. by cancelling the context passed to one of the query methods) during a call to the Scan method of the returned Rows can result in unexpected results if other queries are being made in parallel. This can result in a race condition that may overwrite the ex |
- affected < 0fixed 0
On Linux, if the target of Root.Chmod is replaced with a symlink while the chmod operation is in progress, Chmod can operate on the target of the symlink, even when the target lies outside the root. The Linux fchmodat syscall silently ignores the AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW flag, which R
- affected < 0fixed 0
Validating certificate chains which use policies is unexpectedly inefficient when certificates in the chain contain a very large number of policy mappings, possibly causing denial of service. This only affects validation of otherwise trusted certificate chains, issued by a root C
- affected < 0fixed 0
During chain building, the amount of work that is done is not correctly limited when a large number of intermediate certificates are passed in VerifyOptions.Intermediates, which can lead to a denial of service. This affects both direct users of crypto/x509 and users of crypto/tls
- affected < 1.14.0-r6fixed 1.14.0-r6
SWIG file names containing 'cgo' and well-crafted payloads could lead to code smuggling and arbitrary code execution at build time due to trust layer bypass.
- affected < 1.14.0-r2fixed 1.14.0-r2
gRPC-Go is the Go language implementation of gRPC. Versions prior to 1.79.3 have an authorization bypass resulting from improper input validation of the HTTP/2 `:path` pseudo-header. The gRPC-Go server was too lenient in its routing logic, accepting requests where the `:path` omi
- affected < 0fixed 0
During session resumption in crypto/tls, if the underlying Config has its ClientCAs or RootCAs fields mutated between the initial handshake and the resumed handshake, the resumed handshake may succeed when it should have failed. This may happen when a user calls Config.Clone and
- CVE-2025-61732Feb 5, 2026affected < 1.13.2-r2fixed 1.13.2-r2
A discrepancy between how Go and C/C++ comments were parsed allowed for code smuggling into the resulting cgo binary.
- affected < 1.13.1-r1fixed 1.13.1-r1
SSH servers parsing GSSAPI authentication requests do not validate the number of mechanisms specified in the request, allowing an attacker to cause unbounded memory consumption.
- affected < 1.13.1-r1fixed 1.13.1-r1
SSH Agent servers do not validate the size of messages when processing new identity requests, which may cause the program to panic if the message is malformed due to an out of bounds read.
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
The ParseAddress function constructs domain-literal address components through repeated string concatenation. When parsing large domain-literal components, this can cause excessive CPU consumption.
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
The Reader.ReadResponse function constructs a response string through repeated string concatenation of lines. When the number of lines in a response is large, this can cause excessive CPU consumption.
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
The processing time for parsing some invalid inputs scales non-linearly with respect to the size of the input. This affects programs which parse untrusted PEM inputs.
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
When Conn.Handshake fails during ALPN negotiation the error contains attacker controlled information (the ALPN protocols sent by the client) which is not escaped.
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
Validating certificate chains which contain DSA public keys can cause programs to panic, due to a interface cast that assumes they implement the Equal method. This affects programs which validate arbitrary certificate chains.
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
Due to the design of the name constraint checking algorithm, the processing time of some inputs scale non-linearly with respect to the size of the certificate. This affects programs which validate arbitrary certificate chains.
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
Despite HTTP headers having a default limit of 1MB, the number of cookies that can be parsed does not have a limit. By sending a lot of very small cookies such as "a=;", an attacker can make an HTTP server allocate a large amount of structs, causing large memory consumption.
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
Parsing a maliciously crafted DER payload could allocate large amounts of memory, causing memory exhaustion.
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
tar.Reader does not set a maximum size on the number of sparse region data blocks in GNU tar pax 1.0 sparse files. A maliciously-crafted archive containing a large number of sparse regions can cause a Reader to read an unbounded amount of data from the archive into memory. When r
- affected < 1.13.0-r1fixed 1.13.0-r1
The Parse function permits values other than IPv6 addresses to be included in square brackets within the host component of a URL. RFC 3986 permits IPv6 addresses to be included within the host component, enclosed within square brackets. For example: "http://[::1]/". IPv4 addresse
- affected < 0fixed 0
Cancelling a query (e.g. by cancelling the context passed to one of the query methods) during a call to the Scan method of the returned Rows can result in unexpected results if other queries are being made in parallel. This can result in a race condition that may overwrite the ex
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