BEA Weblogic Server 8.1 through 8.1 SP4 does not properly validate client certificates when reusing cached connections, which allows remote attackers to obtain access via an untrusted X.509 certificate.
BEA WebLogic 7.0 through 7.0 SP6, 8.1 through 8.1 SP4, and 9.0 initial release does not encrypt passwords stored in the JDBCDataSourceFactory MBean Properties, which allows local administrative users to read the cleartext password.
BEA WebLogic Server 8.1 through 8.1 SP5, 9.0, 9.1, and 9.2 Gold, when WS-Security is used, does not properly validate certificates, which allows remote attackers to conduct a man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack.
BEA WebLogic Server 6.1 through 6.1 SP7, 7.0 through 7.0 SP7, and 8.1 through 8.1 SP5 allows remote attackers to read arbitrary files inside the class-path property via .ear or exploded .ear files that use the manifest class-path property to point to utility jar files.
BEA WebLogic Server 8.1 through 8.1 SP5 stores cleartext data in a backup of config.xml after offline editing, which allows local users to obtain sensitive information by reading this backup file.
BEA WebLogic Server 6.1 through 6.1 SP7, 7.0 through 7.0 SP6, 8.1 through 8.1 SP5, and 9.0 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (server hang) via certain requests that cause muxer threads to block when processing error pages.
BEA WebLogic Server 8.1 through 8.1 SP5 does not properly enforce access control after a dynamic update and dynamic redeployment of an application that is implemented through exploded jars, which allows attackers to bypass intended access restrictions.
BEA WebLogic Server 7.0 through 7.0 SP7, 8.1 through 8.1 SP5, 9.0, and 9.1, when using the WebLogic Server 6.1 compatibility realm, allows attackers to execute certain EJB container persistence operations with an administrative identity.
BEA WebLogic Server 7.0 through 7.0 SP6, 8.1 through 8.1 SP5, 9.0, and 9.1 does not enforce a security policy that declares permissions for EJB methods that have array parameters, which allows remote attackers to obtain unauthorized access to these methods.
The BEA WebLogic Server proxy plug-in before June 2006 for the Apache HTTP Server does not properly handle protocol errors, which allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (server outage).