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CVE-2003-1062
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published on February 8, 2005
Unknown vulnerability in the sysinfo system call for Solaris for SPARC 2.6 through 9, and Solaris for x86 2.6, 7, and 8, allows local users to read kernel memory.
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CVE-2003-1072
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published on February 8, 2005
Memory leak in lofiadm in Solaris 8 allows local users to cause a denial of service (kernel memory consumption).
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CVE-2003-1057
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published on February 8, 2005
Unknown vulnerability in CDE Print Viewer (dtprintinfo) for Sun Solaris 2.6 through 9 may allow local users to execute arbitrary code.
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CVE-2003-1064
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published on February 8, 2005
Solaris 8 with IPv6 enabled allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (kernel panic) via a crafted IPv6 packet.
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CVE-2003-1071
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published on February 8, 2005
rpc.walld (wall daemon) for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows local users to send messages to logged on users that appear to come from arbitrary user IDs by closing stderr before executing wall, then supplying a spoofed from header.
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CVE-2003-1073
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published on February 8, 2005
A race condition in the at command for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows local users to delete arbitrary files via the -r argument with .. (dot dot) sequences in the job name, then modifying the directory structure after at checks permissions to delete the file and before the deletion actually takes place.
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CVE-2003-1075
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published on February 8, 2005
Unknown vulnerability in the FTP server (in.ftpd) for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (temporary FTP server hang), which affects other active mode FTP clients.
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CVE-2003-1081
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published on February 8, 2005
Aspppls for Solaris 8 allows local users to overwrite arbitrary files via a symlink attack on the .asppp.fifo temporary file.
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CVE-2003-1082
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published on February 8, 2005
Buffer overflow in utmp_update for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows local users to gain root privileges, as identified by Sun BugID 4705891, a different vulnerability than CVE-2003-1068.
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CVE-2003-1063
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published on February 8, 2005
The patches (1) 105693-13, (2) 108800-02, (3) 105694-13, and (4) 108801-02 for cachefs on Solaris 2.6 and 7 overwrite the inetd.conf file, which may silently reenable services and allow remote attackers to bypass the intended security policy.
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CVE-2003-1069
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published on February 8, 2005
The Telnet daemon (in.telnetd) for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (CPU consumption by infinite loop).
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CVE-2003-1070
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published on February 8, 2005
Unknown vulnerability in rpcbind for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (rpcbind crash).
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CVE-2003-1074
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published on February 8, 2005
Unknown vulnerability in newtask for Solaris 9 allows local users to gain root privileges.
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CVE-2003-1077
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published on February 8, 2005
Unknown vulnerability in UFS for Solaris 9 for SPARC, with logging enabled, allows local users to cause a denial of service (UFS file system hang).
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CVE-2003-1078
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published on February 8, 2005
The FTP client for Solaris 2.6, 7, and 8 with the debug (-d) flag enabled displays the user password on the screen during login.
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CVE-2003-1079
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published on February 8, 2005
Unknown vulnerability in UDP RPC for Solaris 2.5.1 through 9 for SPARC, and 2.5.1 through 8 for x86, allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (memory consumption) via certain arguments in RPC calls that cause large amounts of memory to be allocated.
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CVE-2003-1080
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published on February 8, 2005
Unknown vulnerability in mail for Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows local users to read the email of other users.
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CVE-2003-1055
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published on February 8, 2005
Buffer overflow in the nss_ldap.so.1 library for Sun Solaris 8 and 9 may allow local users to gain root access via a long hostname in an LDAP lookup.
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CVE-2003-1059
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published on February 8, 2005
Unknown vulnerability in the libraries for the PGX32 frame buffer in Solaris 2.5.1 and 2.6 through 9 allows local users to gain root access.
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CVE-2003-1061
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published on February 8, 2005
Race condition in Solaris 2.6 through 9 allows local users to cause a denial of service (kernel panic), as demonstrated via the namefs function, pipe, and certain STREAMS routines.