Total
4 CVE
CVE | Vendors | Products | Updated | CVSS v2 | CVSS v3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CVE-2023-44487 | 32 Akka, Amazon, Apache and 29 more | 311 Http Server, Opensearch Data Prepper, Apisix and 308 more | 2024-11-21 | N/A | 7.5 HIGH |
The HTTP/2 protocol allows a denial of service (server resource consumption) because request cancellation can reset many streams quickly, as exploited in the wild in August through October 2023. | |||||
CVE-2023-38493 | 1 Linecorp | 1 Armeria | 2024-11-21 | N/A | 7.5 HIGH |
Armeria is a microservice framework Spring supports Matrix variables. When Spring integration is used, Armeria calls Spring controllers via `TomcatService` or `JettyService` with the path that may contain matrix variables. Prior to version 1.24.3, the Armeria decorators might not invoked because of the matrix variables. If an attacker sends a specially crafted request, the request may bypass the authorizer. Version 1.24.3 contains a patch for this issue. | |||||
CVE-2021-43795 | 1 Linecorp | 1 Armeria | 2024-11-21 | 5.0 MEDIUM | 7.5 HIGH |
Armeria is an open source microservice framework. In affected versions an attacker can access an Armeria server's local file system beyond its restricted directory by sending an HTTP request whose path contains `%2F` (encoded `/`), such as `/files/..%2Fsecrets.txt`, bypassing Armeria's path validation logic. Armeria 1.13.4 or above contains the hardened path validation logic that handles `%2F` properly. This vulnerability can be worked around by inserting a decorator that performs an additional validation on the request path. | |||||
CVE-2019-16771 | 1 Linecorp | 1 Armeria | 2024-11-21 | 5.0 MEDIUM | 4.8 MEDIUM |
Versions of Armeria 0.85.0 through and including 0.96.0 are vulnerable to HTTP response splitting, which allows remote attackers to inject arbitrary HTTP headers via CRLF sequences when unsanitized data is used to populate the headers of an HTTP response. This vulnerability has been patched in 0.97.0. Potential impacts of this vulnerability include cross-user defacement, cache poisoning, Cross-site scripting (XSS), and page hijacking. |