rpm package
suse/avahi&distro=SUSE Linux Enterprise Server LTSS Extended Security 12 SP5
pkg:rpm/suse/avahi&distro=SUSE%20Linux%20Enterprise%20Server%20LTSS%20Extended%20Security%2012%20SP5
Vulnerabilities (6)
| CVE | Sev | CVSS | KEV | Affected versions | Fixed in | Published | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2026-24401 | — | < 0.6.32-32.39.1 | 0.6.32-32.39.1 | Jan 24, 2026 | Avahi is a system which facilitates service discovery on a local network via the mDNS/DNS-SD protocol suite. In versions 0.9rc2 and below, avahi-daemon can be crashed via a segmentation fault by sending an unsolicited mDNS response containing a recursive CNAME record, where the a | ||
| CVE-2025-68471 | — | < 0.6.32-32.36.1 | 0.6.32-32.36.1 | Jan 12, 2026 | Avahi is a system which facilitates service discovery on a local network via the mDNS/DNS-SD protocol suite. In 0.9-rc2 and earlier, avahi-daemon can be crashed by sending 2 unsolicited announcements with CNAME resource records 2 seconds apart. | ||
| CVE-2025-68468 | — | < 0.6.32-32.36.1 | 0.6.32-32.36.1 | Jan 12, 2026 | Avahi is a system which facilitates service discovery on a local network via the mDNS/DNS-SD protocol suite. In 0.9-rc2 and earlier, avahi-daemon can be crashed by sending unsolicited announcements containing CNAME resource records pointing it to resource records with short TTLs. | ||
| CVE-2025-68276 | — | < 0.6.32-32.36.1 | 0.6.32-32.36.1 | Jan 12, 2026 | Avahi is a system which facilitates service discovery on a local network via the mDNS/DNS-SD protocol suite. In 0.9-rc2 and earlier, an unprivileged local users can crash avahi-daemon (with wide-area disabled) by creating record browsers with the AVAHI_LOOKUP_USE_WIDE_AREA flag s | ||
| CVE-2024-52616 | Med | 5.3 | < 0.6.32-32.30.1 | 0.6.32-32.30.1 | Nov 21, 2024 | A flaw was found in the Avahi-daemon, where it initializes DNS transaction IDs randomly only once at startup, incrementing them sequentially after that. This predictable behavior facilitates DNS spoofing attacks, allowing attackers to guess transaction IDs. | |
| CVE-2024-52615 | Med | 5.3 | < 0.6.32-32.33.1 | 0.6.32-32.33.1 | Nov 21, 2024 | A flaw was found in Avahi-daemon, which relies on fixed source ports for wide-area DNS queries. This issue simplifies attacks where malicious DNS responses are injected. |
- CVE-2026-24401Jan 24, 2026affected < 0.6.32-32.39.1fixed 0.6.32-32.39.1
Avahi is a system which facilitates service discovery on a local network via the mDNS/DNS-SD protocol suite. In versions 0.9rc2 and below, avahi-daemon can be crashed via a segmentation fault by sending an unsolicited mDNS response containing a recursive CNAME record, where the a
- CVE-2025-68471Jan 12, 2026affected < 0.6.32-32.36.1fixed 0.6.32-32.36.1
Avahi is a system which facilitates service discovery on a local network via the mDNS/DNS-SD protocol suite. In 0.9-rc2 and earlier, avahi-daemon can be crashed by sending 2 unsolicited announcements with CNAME resource records 2 seconds apart.
- CVE-2025-68468Jan 12, 2026affected < 0.6.32-32.36.1fixed 0.6.32-32.36.1
Avahi is a system which facilitates service discovery on a local network via the mDNS/DNS-SD protocol suite. In 0.9-rc2 and earlier, avahi-daemon can be crashed by sending unsolicited announcements containing CNAME resource records pointing it to resource records with short TTLs.
- CVE-2025-68276Jan 12, 2026affected < 0.6.32-32.36.1fixed 0.6.32-32.36.1
Avahi is a system which facilitates service discovery on a local network via the mDNS/DNS-SD protocol suite. In 0.9-rc2 and earlier, an unprivileged local users can crash avahi-daemon (with wide-area disabled) by creating record browsers with the AVAHI_LOOKUP_USE_WIDE_AREA flag s
- affected < 0.6.32-32.30.1fixed 0.6.32-32.30.1
A flaw was found in the Avahi-daemon, where it initializes DNS transaction IDs randomly only once at startup, incrementing them sequentially after that. This predictable behavior facilitates DNS spoofing attacks, allowing attackers to guess transaction IDs.
- affected < 0.6.32-32.33.1fixed 0.6.32-32.33.1
A flaw was found in Avahi-daemon, which relies on fixed source ports for wide-area DNS queries. This issue simplifies attacks where malicious DNS responses are injected.