Product:

Stormshield_network_security

(Stormshield)
Repositories

Unknown:

This might be proprietary software.

#Vulnerabilities 35
Date Id Summary Products Score Patch Annotated
2022-08-05 CVE-2022-37434 zlib through 1.2.12 has a heap-based buffer over-read or buffer overflow in inflate in inflate.c via a large gzip header extra field. NOTE: only applications that call inflateGetHeader are affected. Some common applications bundle the affected zlib source code but may be unable to call inflateGetHeader (e.g., see the nodejs/node reference). Ipados, Iphone_os, Macos, Watchos, Debian_linux, Fedora, Active_iq_unified_manager, H300s_firmware, H500s_firmware, H700s_firmware, Hci, Hci_compute_node, Management_services_for_element_software, Oncommand_workflow_automation, Ontap_select_deploy_administration_utility, Storagegrid, Stormshield_network_security, Zlib 9.8
2022-10-31 CVE-2022-40617 strongSwan before 5.9.8 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service in the revocation plugin by sending a crafted end-entity (and intermediate CA) certificate that contains a CRL/OCSP URL that points to a server (under the attacker's control) that doesn't properly respond but (for example) just does nothing after the initial TCP handshake, or sends an excessive amount of application data. Ubuntu_linux, Debian_linux, Fedora, Stormshield_network_security, Strongswan 7.5
2023-02-08 CVE-2022-4450 The function PEM_read_bio_ex() reads a PEM file from a BIO and parses and decodes the "name" (e.g. "CERTIFICATE"), any header data and the payload data. If the function succeeds then the "name_out", "header" and "data" arguments are populated with pointers to buffers containing the relevant decoded data. The caller is responsible for freeing those buffers. It is possible to construct a PEM file that results in 0 bytes of payload data. In this case PEM_read_bio_ex() will return a failure code... Openssl, Stormshield_network_security 7.5
2023-02-08 CVE-2022-4450 The function PEM_read_bio_ex() reads a PEM file from a BIO and parses and decodes the "name" (e.g. "CERTIFICATE"), any header data and the payload data. If the function succeeds then the "name_out", "header" and "data" arguments are populated with pointers to buffers containing the relevant decoded data. The caller is responsible for freeing those buffers. It is possible to construct a PEM file that results in 0 bytes of payload data. In this case PEM_read_bio_ex() will return a failure code... Openssl, Stormshield_network_security 7.5
2023-02-08 CVE-2022-4450 The function PEM_read_bio_ex() reads a PEM file from a BIO and parses and decodes the "name" (e.g. "CERTIFICATE"), any header data and the payload data. If the function succeeds then the "name_out", "header" and "data" arguments are populated with pointers to buffers containing the relevant decoded data. The caller is responsible for freeing those buffers. It is possible to construct a PEM file that results in 0 bytes of payload data. In this case PEM_read_bio_ex() will return a failure code... Openssl, Stormshield_network_security 7.5