Product:

Apport

(Apport_project)
Repositories

Unknown:

This might be proprietary software.

#Vulnerabilities 24
Date Id Summary Products Score Patch Annotated
2020-02-08 CVE-2019-11481 Kevin Backhouse discovered that apport would read a user-supplied configuration file with elevated privileges. By replacing the file with a symbolic link, a user could get apport to read any file on the system as root, with unknown consequences. Apport, Ubuntu_linux 7.8
2020-04-28 CVE-2019-15790 Apport reads and writes information on a crashed process to /proc/pid with elevated privileges. Apport then determines which user the crashed process belongs to by reading /proc/pid through get_pid_info() in data/apport. An unprivileged user could exploit this to read information about a privileged running process by exploiting PID recycling. This information could then be used to obtain ASLR offsets for a process with an existing memory corruption vulnerability. The initial fix introduced... Apport, Ubuntu_linux 3.3
2020-02-08 CVE-2019-11485 Sander Bos discovered Apport's lock file was in a world-writable directory which allowed all users to prevent crash handling. Apport, Ubuntu_linux 3.3
2020-02-08 CVE-2019-11483 Sander Bos discovered Apport mishandled crash dumps originating from containers. This could be used by a local attacker to generate a crash report for a privileged process that is readable by an unprivileged user. Apport, Ubuntu_linux N/A
2020-02-08 CVE-2019-11482 Sander Bos discovered a time of check to time of use (TOCTTOU) vulnerability in apport that allowed a user to cause core files to be written in arbitrary directories. Apport, Ubuntu_linux N/A
2018-05-31 CVE-2018-6552 Apport does not properly handle crashes originating from a PID namespace allowing local users to create certain files as root which an attacker could leverage to perform a denial of service via resource exhaustion, possibly gain root privileges, or escape from containers. The is_same_ns() function returns True when /proc/<global pid>/ does not exist in order to indicate that the crash should be handled in the global namespace rather than inside of a container. However, the portion of the... Apport 7.8
2018-02-02 CVE-2017-14180 Apport 2.13 through 2.20.7 does not properly handle crashes originating from a PID namespace allowing local users to create certain files as root which an attacker could leverage to perform a denial of service via resource exhaustion or possibly gain root privileges, a different vulnerability than CVE-2017-14179. Apport, Ubuntu_linux 7.8
2018-02-02 CVE-2017-14179 Apport before 2.13 does not properly handle crashes originating from a PID namespace allowing local users to create certain files as root which an attacker could leverage to perform a denial of service via resource exhaustion, possibly gain root privileges, or escape from containers. Apport, Ubuntu_linux 7.8
2018-02-02 CVE-2017-14177 Apport through 2.20.7 does not properly handle core dumps from setuid binaries allowing local users to create certain files as root which an attacker could leverage to perform a denial of service via resource exhaustion or possibly gain root privileges. NOTE: this vulnerability exists because of an incomplete fix for CVE-2015-1324. Apport, Ubuntu_linux 7.8
2017-07-18 CVE-2017-10708 An issue was discovered in Apport through 2.20.x. In apport/report.py, Apport sets the ExecutablePath field and it then uses the path to run package specific hooks without protecting against path traversal. This allows remote attackers to execute arbitrary code via a crafted .crash file. Apport 7.8