rpm package
suse/sssd&distro=SUSE Linux Enterprise Desktop 12 SP3
pkg:rpm/suse/sssd&distro=SUSE%20Linux%20Enterprise%20Desktop%2012%20SP3
Vulnerabilities (4)
| CVE | Sev | CVSS | KEV | Affected versions | Fixed in | Published | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2018-16838 | — | < 1.13.4-34.37.1 | 1.13.4-34.37.1 | Mar 25, 2019 | A flaw was found in sssd Group Policy Objects implementation. When the GPO is not readable by SSSD due to a too strict permission settings on the server side, SSSD will allow all authenticated users to login instead of denying access. | ||
| CVE-2019-3811 | — | < 1.13.4-34.31.1 | 1.13.4-34.31.1 | Jan 15, 2019 | A vulnerability was found in sssd. If a user was configured with no home directory set, sssd would return '/' (the root directory) instead of '' (the empty string / no home directory). This could impact services that restrict the user's filesystem access to within their home dire | ||
| CVE-2017-12173 | Med | 4.3 | < 1.13.4-34.7.1 | 1.13.4-34.7.1 | Jul 27, 2018 | It was found that sssd's sysdb_search_user_by_upn_res() function before 1.16.0 did not sanitize requests when querying its local cache and was vulnerable to injection. In a centralized login environment, if a password hash was locally cached for a given user, an authenticated att | |
| CVE-2018-10852 | Low | 3.8 | < 1.13.4-34.23.1 | 1.13.4-34.23.1 | Jun 26, 2018 | The UNIX pipe which sudo uses to contact SSSD and read the available sudo rules from SSSD has too wide permissions, which means that anyone who can send a message using the same raw protocol that sudo and SSSD use can read the sudo rules available for any user. This affects versi |
- CVE-2018-16838Mar 25, 2019affected < 1.13.4-34.37.1fixed 1.13.4-34.37.1
A flaw was found in sssd Group Policy Objects implementation. When the GPO is not readable by SSSD due to a too strict permission settings on the server side, SSSD will allow all authenticated users to login instead of denying access.
- CVE-2019-3811Jan 15, 2019affected < 1.13.4-34.31.1fixed 1.13.4-34.31.1
A vulnerability was found in sssd. If a user was configured with no home directory set, sssd would return '/' (the root directory) instead of '' (the empty string / no home directory). This could impact services that restrict the user's filesystem access to within their home dire
- affected < 1.13.4-34.7.1fixed 1.13.4-34.7.1
It was found that sssd's sysdb_search_user_by_upn_res() function before 1.16.0 did not sanitize requests when querying its local cache and was vulnerable to injection. In a centralized login environment, if a password hash was locally cached for a given user, an authenticated att
- affected < 1.13.4-34.23.1fixed 1.13.4-34.23.1
The UNIX pipe which sudo uses to contact SSSD and read the available sudo rules from SSSD has too wide permissions, which means that anyone who can send a message using the same raw protocol that sudo and SSSD use can read the sudo rules available for any user. This affects versi