Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <4.25.8 , >=5.26.0rc1,<5.29.5 , >=6.30.0rc1,<6.31.1 |
show Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to a potential Denial of Service (DoS) attack due to unbounded recursion when parsing untrusted Protocol Buffers data. The pure-Python implementation fails to enforce recursion depth limits when processing recursive groups, recursive messages, or a series of SGROUP tags, leading to stack overflow conditions that can crash the application by exceeding Python's recursion limit. |
protobuf | 3.17.3 | <3.18.3 , >=3.19.0rc0,<3.19.5 , >=3.20.0rc0,<3.20.2 , >=4.0.0rc0,<4.21.6 |
show Protobuf 3.18.3, 3.19.5, 3.20.2 and 4.21.6 include a fix for CVE-2022-1941: A parsing vulnerability for the MessageSet type in the ProtocolBuffers versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 3.21.5 for protobuf-cpp, and versions prior to and including 3.16.1, 3.17.3, 3.18.2, 3.19.4, 3.20.1 and 4.21.5 for protobuf-python can lead to out of memory failures. A specially crafted message with multiple key-value per elements creates parsing issues, and can lead to a Denial of Service against services receiving unsanitized input. https://github.com/protocolbuffers/protobuf/security/advisories/GHSA-8gq9-2x98-w8hf |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.2 |
show Affected versions of Requests, when making requests through a Requests `Session`, if the first request is made with `verify=False` to disable cert verification, all subsequent requests to the same host will continue to ignore cert verification regardless of changes to the value of `verify`. This behavior will continue for the lifecycle of the connection in the connection pool. Requests 2.32.0 fixes the issue, but versions 2.32.0 and 2.32.1 were yanked due to conflicts with CVE-2024-35195 mitigation. |
requests | 2.25.1 | <2.32.4 |
show Requests is an HTTP library. Due to a URL parsing issue, Requests releases prior to 2.32.4 may leak .netrc credentials to third parties for specific maliciously-crafted URLs. Users should upgrade to version 2.32.4 to receive a fix. For older versions of Requests, use of the .netrc file can be disabled with `trust_env=False` on one's Requests Session. |
requests | 2.25.1 | >=2.3.0,<2.31.0 |
show Affected versions of Requests are vulnerable to proxy credential leakage. When redirected to an HTTPS endpoint, the Proxy-Authorization header is forwarded to the destination server due to the use of rebuild_proxies to reattach the header. This may allow a malicious actor to exfiltrate sensitive information. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2015.04.28,<2023.07.22 |
show Certifi 2023.07.22 includes a fix for CVE-2023-37920: Certifi prior to version 2023.07.22 recognizes "e-Tugra" root certificates. e-Tugra's root certificates were subject to an investigation prompted by reporting of security issues in their systems. Certifi 2023.07.22 removes root certificates from "e-Tugra" from the root store. https://github.com/certifi/python-certifi/security/advisories/GHSA-xqr8-7jwr-rhp7 |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | >=2021.05.30,<2024.07.04 |
show Certifi affected versions recognized root certificates from GLOBALTRUST. Certifi patch removes these root certificates from the root store. These certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation that identified "long-running and unresolved compliance issues" and are also in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. |
certifi | 2021.5.30 | <2022.12.07 |
show Certifi 2022.12.07 includes a fix for CVE-2022-23491: Certifi 2022.12.07 removes root certificates from "TrustCor" from the root store. These are in the process of being removed from Mozilla's trust store. TrustCor's root certificates are being removed pursuant to an investigation prompted by media reporting that TrustCor's ownership also operated a business that produced spyware. Conclusions of Mozilla's investigation can be found in the linked google group discussion. |
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