rpm package
opensuse/sngrep&distro=openSUSE Tumbleweed
pkg:rpm/opensuse/sngrep&distro=openSUSE%20Tumbleweed
Vulnerabilities (3)
| CVE | Sev | CVSS | KEV | Affected versions | Fixed in | Published | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2024-35434 | — | < 1.8.1-2.1 | 1.8.1-2.1 | May 29, 2024 | Irontec Sngrep v1.8.1 was discovered to contain a heap buffer overflow via the function rtp_check_packet at /sngrep/src/rtp.c. This vulnerability allows attackers to cause a Denial of Service (DoS) via a crafted SIP packet. | ||
| CVE-2024-3120 | — | < 1.8.1-1.1 | 1.8.1-1.1 | Apr 9, 2024 | A stack-buffer overflow vulnerability exists in all versions of sngrep since v1.4.1. The flaw is due to inadequate bounds checking when copying 'Content-Length' and 'Warning' headers into fixed-size buffers in the sip_validate_packet and sip_parse_extra_headers functions within s | ||
| CVE-2024-3119 | — | < 1.8.1-1.1 | 1.8.1-1.1 | Apr 9, 2024 | A buffer overflow vulnerability exists in all versions of sngrep since v0.4.2, due to improper handling of 'Call-ID' and 'X-Call-ID' SIP headers. The functions sip_get_callid and sip_get_xcallid in sip.c use the strncpy function to copy header contents into fixed-size buffers wit |
- CVE-2024-35434May 29, 2024affected < 1.8.1-2.1fixed 1.8.1-2.1
Irontec Sngrep v1.8.1 was discovered to contain a heap buffer overflow via the function rtp_check_packet at /sngrep/src/rtp.c. This vulnerability allows attackers to cause a Denial of Service (DoS) via a crafted SIP packet.
- CVE-2024-3120Apr 9, 2024affected < 1.8.1-1.1fixed 1.8.1-1.1
A stack-buffer overflow vulnerability exists in all versions of sngrep since v1.4.1. The flaw is due to inadequate bounds checking when copying 'Content-Length' and 'Warning' headers into fixed-size buffers in the sip_validate_packet and sip_parse_extra_headers functions within s
- CVE-2024-3119Apr 9, 2024affected < 1.8.1-1.1fixed 1.8.1-1.1
A buffer overflow vulnerability exists in all versions of sngrep since v0.4.2, due to improper handling of 'Call-ID' and 'X-Call-ID' SIP headers. The functions sip_get_callid and sip_get_xcallid in sip.c use the strncpy function to copy header contents into fixed-size buffers wit