Potential use of sensitive information in GET requests in Checkmk GmbH's Checkmk versions <2.4.0p13, <2.3.0p38, <2.2.0p46, and 2.1.0 (EOL) may cause sensitive form data to be included in URL query parameters, which may be logged in various places such as browser history or web server logs.
Improper neutralization of Livestatus command delimiters in autocomplete endpoint within the RestAPI of Checkmk versions <2.4.0p6, <2.3.0p35, <2.2.0p44, and 2.1.0 (EOL) allows an authenticated user to inject arbitrary Livestatus commands.
Packages downloaded by Checkmk's automatic agent updates on Linux and Solaris have incorrect permissions in Checkmk < 2.4.0p1, < 2.3.0p32, < 2.2.0p42 and <= 2.1.0p49 (EOL). This allows a local attacker to read sensitive data.
Argument injection in special agent configuration in Checkmk <2.4.0p1, <2.3.0p32, <2.2.0p42 and 2.1.0 allows authenticated attackers to write arbitrary files
Privilege escalation in jar_signature agent plugin in Checkmk versions <2.4.0b7 (beta), <2.3.0p32, <2.2.0p42, and 2.1.0p49 (EOL) allow user with write access to JAVA_HOME/bin directory to escalate privileges.
Files to be deployed with agents are accessible without authentication in Checkmk 2.1.0, Checkmk 2.2.0, Checkmk 2.3.0 and <Checkmk 2.4.0b6 allows attacker to access files that could contain secrets.
Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File in Checkmk GmbH's Checkmk versions <2.3.0p29, <2.2.0p41 and <=2.1.0p49 (EOL) causes remote site authentication secrets to be written to log files accessible to administrators.
Improper neutralization of livestatus command delimiters in a specific endpoint within RestAPI of Checkmk prior to 2.2.0p39, 2.3.0p25, and 2.1.0p51 (EOL) allows arbitrary livestatus command execution. Exploitation requires the attacker to have a contact group assigned to their user account and for an event to originate from a host with the same contact group or from an event generated with an unknown host.
Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File in Checkmk GmbH's Checkmk versions <2.3.0p27, <2.2.0p40, and 2.1.0p51 (EOL) causes LDAP credentials to be written to Apache error log file accessible to administrators.