In the Linux kernel, the following vulnerability has been resolved:
fs/omfs: reject s_sys_blocksize smaller than OMFS_DIR_START
omfs_fill_super() rejects oversized s_sys_blocksize values (> PAGE_SIZE),
but it does not reject values smaller than OMFS_DIR_START (0x1b8 = 440).
Later, omfs_make_empty() uses
sbi->s_sys_blocksize - OMFS_DIR_START
as the length argument to memset(). Since s_sys_blocksize is u32,
a crafted filesystem image with s_sys_blocksize < OMFS_DIR_START causes
an unsigned underflow there, wrapping to a value near 2^32. That drives
a ~4 GiB memset() from bh->b_data + OMFS_DIR_START and overwrites kernel
memory far beyond the backing block buffer.
Add the corresponding lower-bound check alongside the existing upper-bound
check in omfs_fill_super(), so that malformed images are rejected during
superblock validation before any filesystem data is processed.
Improper neutralization of input during web page generation ('cross-site scripting') vulnerability in OpenText Access Manager allows Cross-Site Scripting (XSS).
This issue affects Access Manager: from 5.1 through 5.1.2.
An unauthorized user can modify configuration through API
calls that affects the OpenText Access
Manager. This issue affects Access Manager before 5.1.3.
A missing permission check in Jenkins MCP Server Plugin 0.177.v629fdb_2557fe and earlier allows attackers with Item/Read permission to read the Pipeline replay scripts of jobs they can access.
Jenkins OWASP ZAP Plugin 1.0.7 and earlier performs build operations on the Jenkins controller rather than the assigned agent, allowing attackers with Item/Configure permission to execute arbitrary code on the Jenkins controller.
Jenkins FitNesse Plugin 1.36 and earlier stores passwords unencrypted in job config.xml files on the Jenkins controller, where they can be viewed by users with Extended Read permission or access to the Jenkins controller file system.
Jenkins Assembla Plugin 1.4 and earlier does not configure its XML parser to prevent XML external entity (XXE) attacks, allowing attackers able to control the responses of the configured Assembla server to extract secrets from the Jenkins controller or perform server-side request forgery.
A missing permission check in Jenkins Assembla Plugin 1.4 and earlier allows attackers with Overall/Read permission to connect to an attacker-specified URL using an attacker-specified username and password.
A cross-site request forgery (CSRF) vulnerability in Jenkins Assembla Plugin 1.4 and earlier allows attackers to connect to an attacker-specified URL using an attacker-specified username and password.
A cross-site request forgery (CSRF) vulnerability in Jenkins Zowe zDevOps Plugin 1.1.3.50.ve350c9b_450b_1 and earlier allows attackers to connect to an attacker-specified URL using attacker-specified credentials IDs obtained through another method, capturing credentials stored in Jenkins.