rpm package
suse/cloud-init&distro=SUSE Linux Enterprise Module for Public Cloud 15 SP1
pkg:rpm/suse/cloud-init&distro=SUSE%20Linux%20Enterprise%20Module%20for%20Public%20Cloud%2015%20SP1
Vulnerabilities (6)
| CVE | Sev | CVSS | KEV | Affected versions | Fixed in | Published | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2023-1786 | — | < 23.1-150100.8.66.1 | 23.1-150100.8.66.1 | Apr 26, 2023 | Sensitive data could be exposed in logs of cloud-init before version 23.1.2. An attacker could use this information to find hashed passwords and possibly escalate their privilege. | ||
| CVE-2022-2084 | — | < 23.1-150100.8.63.5 | 23.1-150100.8.63.5 | Apr 19, 2023 | Sensitive data could be exposed in world readable logs of cloud-init before version 22.3 when schema failures are reported. This leak could include hashed passwords. | ||
| CVE-2021-3429 | — | < 23.1-150100.8.66.1 | 23.1-150100.8.66.1 | Apr 19, 2023 | When instructing cloud-init to set a random password for a new user account, versions before 21.2 would write that password to the world-readable log file /var/log/cloud-init-output.log. This could allow a local user to log in as another user. | ||
| CVE-2020-8632 | — | < 19.4-8.17.1 | 19.4-8.17.1 | Feb 5, 2020 | In cloud-init through 19.4, rand_user_password in cloudinit/config/cc_set_passwords.py has a small default pwlen value, which makes it easier for attackers to guess passwords. | ||
| CVE-2020-8631 | — | < 19.4-8.17.1 | 19.4-8.17.1 | Feb 5, 2020 | cloud-init through 19.4 relies on Mersenne Twister for a random password, which makes it easier for attackers to predict passwords, because rand_str in cloudinit/util.py calls the random.choice function. | ||
| CVE-2019-0816 | — | < 19.2-8.11.1 | 19.2-8.11.1 | Apr 9, 2019 | A security feature bypass exists in Azure SSH Keypairs, due to a change in the provisioning logic for some Linux images that use cloud-init, aka 'Azure SSH Keypairs Security Feature Bypass Vulnerability'. |
- CVE-2023-1786Apr 26, 2023affected < 23.1-150100.8.66.1fixed 23.1-150100.8.66.1
Sensitive data could be exposed in logs of cloud-init before version 23.1.2. An attacker could use this information to find hashed passwords and possibly escalate their privilege.
- CVE-2022-2084Apr 19, 2023affected < 23.1-150100.8.63.5fixed 23.1-150100.8.63.5
Sensitive data could be exposed in world readable logs of cloud-init before version 22.3 when schema failures are reported. This leak could include hashed passwords.
- CVE-2021-3429Apr 19, 2023affected < 23.1-150100.8.66.1fixed 23.1-150100.8.66.1
When instructing cloud-init to set a random password for a new user account, versions before 21.2 would write that password to the world-readable log file /var/log/cloud-init-output.log. This could allow a local user to log in as another user.
- CVE-2020-8632Feb 5, 2020affected < 19.4-8.17.1fixed 19.4-8.17.1
In cloud-init through 19.4, rand_user_password in cloudinit/config/cc_set_passwords.py has a small default pwlen value, which makes it easier for attackers to guess passwords.
- CVE-2020-8631Feb 5, 2020affected < 19.4-8.17.1fixed 19.4-8.17.1
cloud-init through 19.4 relies on Mersenne Twister for a random password, which makes it easier for attackers to predict passwords, because rand_str in cloudinit/util.py calls the random.choice function.
- CVE-2019-0816Apr 9, 2019affected < 19.2-8.11.1fixed 19.2-8.11.1
A security feature bypass exists in Azure SSH Keypairs, due to a change in the provisioning logic for some Linux images that use cloud-init, aka 'Azure SSH Keypairs Security Feature Bypass Vulnerability'.