Multiple unspecified vulnerabilities in Oracle Application Server 9.0.4.2 and 10.1.2.0.2, and E-Business Suite and Applications 11.5.10, have unspecified impact and attack vectors, as identified by Oracle Vuln# (1) FORM01 and (2) FORM02 in the Oracle Forms component.
Unspecified vulnerability in the Java Net component of Oracle Database Server 8.1.7.4, 9.0.1.5, 9.0.1.5 FIPS, 9.2.0.7, and 10.1.0.4, and Application Server 1.0.2.2, 9.0.4.2, and 10.1.2.0.2, has unspecified impact and attack vectors, as identified by Oracle Vuln# JN01.
Unspecified vulnerability in the Oracle HTTP Server component of Oracle Database Server 9.0.1.5, 9.0.1.5 FIPS, 9.2.0.7, and 10.1.0.5, and Application Server 1.0.2.2, 9.0.4.2, and 10.1.2.0.2, has unspecified impact and attack vectors, as identified by Oracle Vuln# OHS01.
Unspecified vulnerability in the Oracle HTTP Server component of Oracle Database Server 10.1.0.5 and Application Server 10.1.2.0.2 has unspecified impact and attack vectors, as identified by Oracle Vuln# OHS02.
Multiple unspecified vulnerabilities in HTTP Server in Oracle Database Server 8i up to 10.1.0.4.2 and Application Server 1.0.2.2 up to 10.1.2.0 have unknown impact and attack vectors, aka Oracle Vuln# (1) DB30 and AS03 or (2) DB31 and AS05.
Unspecified vulnerability in the OC4J Module in Oracle Application Server 9.0 up to 10.1.2.0.2 has unknown impact and attack vectors, as identified by Oracle Vuln# AS01.
Multiple unspecified vulnerabilities in Oracle Application Server 9.0 up to 10.1.2.0 have unknown impact and attack vectors, as identified by Oracle Vuln# (1) AS02 in Containers for J2EE, (2) AS07 in Internet Directory, (3) AS09 in Report Server, and (4) AS11 in Web Cache.
The PL/SQL module for the Oracle HTTP Server in Oracle Application Server 10g, when using the WE8ISO8859P1 character set, does not perform character conversions properly, which allows remote attackers to bypass access restrictions for certain procedures via an encoded URL with "%FF" encoded sequences that are improperly converted to "Y" characters.
Buffer overflow in extproc in Oracle 10g allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code via environment variables in the library name, which are expanded after the length check is performed.
Directory traversal vulnerability in extproc in Oracle 9i and 10g allows remote attackers to access arbitrary libraries outside of the $ORACLE_HOME\bin directory.