Non-relational SQL injection vulnerability (NoSQLi) in the Wakyma web application, specifically in the endpoint 'vets.wakyma.com/hospitalization/generate-hospitalization-summary'. This vulnerability could allow an authenticated user to alter a POST request to the affected endpoint for the purpose of injecting special NoSQL commands, resulting in the attacker being able to obtain customer reports.
Non-relational SQL injection vulnerability (NoSQLi) in the Wakyma web application, specifically in the endpoint 'vets.wakyma.com/pets/print-tags'. This vulnerability could allow an authenticated user to alter a POST request to the affected endpoint for the purpose of injecting NoSQL commands, allowing them to list both pets and owner names.
Stored Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerability in the Wakyma web application, specifically in the endpoint 'vets.wakyma.com/configuracion/agenda/modelo-formulario-evento'. A user with permission to create personalized accounts could exploit this vulnerability simply by creating a malicious survey that would harm the entire veterinary team. At the same time, a user with low privileges could exploit this vulnerability to access unauthorized data and perform actions with elevated privileges.
Vulnogram 1.0.0 contains a stored cross-site scripting vulnerability in comment hypertext handling that allows attackers to inject malicious scripts. Remote attackers can inject XSS payloads through comments to execute arbitrary JavaScript in victims' browsers.
PX4 autopilot is a flight control solution for drones. Prior to 1.17.0-rc1, a heap-use-after-free is detected in the MavlinkShell::available() function. The issue is caused by a race condition between the MAVLink receiver thread (which handles shell creation/destruction) and the telemetry sender thread (which polls the shell for available output). The issue is remotely triggerable via MAVLink SERIAL_CONTROL messages (ID 126), which can be sent by an external ground station or automated script. This vulnerability is fixed in 1.17.0-rc1.
Runtipi is a personal homeserver orchestrator. Prior to 4.8.1, The Runtipi /api/auth/verify-totp endpoint does not enforce any rate limiting, attempt counting, or account lockout mechanism. An attacker who has obtained a user's valid credentials (via phishing, credential stuffing, or data breach) can brute-force the 6-digit TOTP code to completely bypass two-factor authentication. The TOTP verification session persists for 24 hours (default cache TTL), providing an excessive window during which the full 1,000,000-code keyspace (000000–999999) can be exhausted. At practical request rates (~500 req/s), the attack completes in approximately 33 minutes in the worst case. This vulnerability is fixed in 4.8.1.
PX4 autopilot is a flight control solution for drones. Prior to 1.17.0-rc2, An unauthenticated path traversal vulnerability in the PX4 Autopilot MAVLink FTP implementation allows any MAVLink peer to read, write, create, delete, and rename arbitrary files on the flight controller filesystem without authentication. On NuttX targets, the FTP root directory is an empty string, meaning attacker-supplied paths are passed directly to filesystem syscalls with no prefix or sanitization for read operations. On POSIX targets (Linux companion computers, SITL), the write-path validation function unconditionally returns true, providing no protection. A TOCTOU race condition in the write validation on NuttX further allows bypassing the only existing guard. This vulnerability is fixed in 1.17.0-rc2.