rpm package
suse/dnsmasq&distro=SUSE Linux Enterprise Module for Basesystem 15 SP3
pkg:rpm/suse/dnsmasq&distro=SUSE%20Linux%20Enterprise%20Module%20for%20Basesystem%2015%20SP3
Vulnerabilities (3)
| CVE | Sev | CVSS | KEV | Affected versions | Fixed in | Published | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2022-0934 | — | < 2.86-150100.7.20.1 | 2.86-150100.7.20.1 | Aug 29, 2022 | A single-byte, non-arbitrary write/use-after-free flaw was found in dnsmasq. This flaw allows an attacker who sends a crafted packet processed by dnsmasq, potentially causing a denial of service. | ||
| CVE-2021-3448 | — | < 2.86-7.14.1 | 2.86-7.14.1 | Apr 8, 2021 | A flaw was found in dnsmasq in versions before 2.85. When configured to use a specific server for a given network interface, dnsmasq uses a fixed port while forwarding queries. An attacker on the network, able to find the outgoing port used by dnsmasq, only needs to guess the ran | ||
| CVE-2020-14312 | — | < 2.86-7.14.1 | 2.86-7.14.1 | Feb 5, 2021 | A flaw was found in the default configuration of dnsmasq, as shipped with Fedora versions prior to 31 and in all versions Red Hat Enterprise Linux, where it listens on any interface and accepts queries from addresses outside of its local subnet. In particular, the option `local-s |
- CVE-2022-0934Aug 29, 2022affected < 2.86-150100.7.20.1fixed 2.86-150100.7.20.1
A single-byte, non-arbitrary write/use-after-free flaw was found in dnsmasq. This flaw allows an attacker who sends a crafted packet processed by dnsmasq, potentially causing a denial of service.
- CVE-2021-3448Apr 8, 2021affected < 2.86-7.14.1fixed 2.86-7.14.1
A flaw was found in dnsmasq in versions before 2.85. When configured to use a specific server for a given network interface, dnsmasq uses a fixed port while forwarding queries. An attacker on the network, able to find the outgoing port used by dnsmasq, only needs to guess the ran
- CVE-2020-14312Feb 5, 2021affected < 2.86-7.14.1fixed 2.86-7.14.1
A flaw was found in the default configuration of dnsmasq, as shipped with Fedora versions prior to 31 and in all versions Red Hat Enterprise Linux, where it listens on any interface and accepts queries from addresses outside of its local subnet. In particular, the option `local-s