Unspecified vulnerability in the Utility Classes for IBM WebSphere Application Server (WAS) before 5.1.1.13 and 6.x before 6.0.2.17 has unknown impact and attack vectors.
Unspecified vulnerability in IBM WebSphere Application Server before 6.1.0.2 has unspecified impact and attack vectors, related to a "possible security exposure," aka PK29360.
The Web Services Notification (WSN) security component of IBM WebSphere Application Server before 6.1.0.2 allows attackers to obtain unspecified access without supplying a username and password, aka PK28374.
Multiple unspecified vulnerabilities in IBM WebSphere Application Server before 6.0.2.13 have unspecified vectors and impact, including (1) an "authority problem" in ThreadIdentitySupport as identified by PK25199, and "Potential security exposure" issues as identified by (2) PK22747, (3) PK24334, (4) PK25740, and (5) PK26123.
IBM WebSphere Application Server (WAS) before 6.0.2.13 allows context-dependent attackers to obtain sensitive information via unspecified vectors related to "JSP source code exposure" (PK23475), which occurs when ibm-web-ext.xmi sets fileServingEnabled to true or ExtendedDocumentRoot is used to place a JSP outside a WAR.file; (3) the First Failure Data Capture (ffdc) log file (PK24834); and (4) traces (PK25568), a different issue than CVE-2006-4137.
Multiple unspecified vulnerabilities in IBM WebSphere Application Server before 6.1.0.1 have unspecified impact and attack vectors involving (1) "SOAP requests and responses", (2) mbean, (3) ThreadIdentitySupport, and possibly others.
Unspecified vulnerability in IBM WebSphere Application Server (WAS) before 6.0.2.11, when fileServingEnabled is true, allows remote attackers to obtain JSP source code and other sensitive information via "URIs with special characters."
Unspecified vulnerability in IBM WebSphere Application Server before 6.0.2.11 has unknown impact and attack vectors because the "UserNameToken cache was improperly used."
Cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in the 500 Internal Server Error page on the SOAP port (8880/tcp) in IBM WebSphere Application Server 5.0.2 and earlier, 5.1.x before 5.1.1.12, and 6.0.2 up to 6.0.2.7, allows remote attackers to inject arbitrary web script or HTML via the URI, which is contained in a FAULTACTOR element on this page. NOTE: some sources have reported the element as "faultfactor," but this is likely erroneous.
Unspecified vulnerability in IBM WebSphere 5.0.2.10 through 5.0.2.15 and 5.1.1.4 through 5.1.1.9 allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive information via unknown attack vectors, which causes JSP source code to be revealed.