Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
ipython | 8.0.1 | <8.10.0 |
show IPython 8.10.0 includes a fix for CVE-2023-24816: Versions prior to 8.10.0 are subject to a command injection vulnerability with very specific prerequisites. This vulnerability requires that the function 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' be called on Windows in a Python environment where ctypes is not available. The dependency on 'ctypes' in 'IPython.utils._process_win32' prevents the vulnerable code from ever being reached in the ipython binary. However, as a library that could be used by another tool 'set_term_title' could be called and hence introduce a vulnerability. If an attacker get untrusted input to an instance of this function they would be able to inject shell commands as current process and limited to the scope of the current process. As a workaround, users should ensure that any calls to the 'IPython.utils.terminal.set_term_title' function are done with trusted or filtered input. https://github.com/ipython/ipython/security/advisories/GHSA-29gw-9793-fvw7 |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
Package | Installed | Affected | Info |
---|---|---|---|
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <23.3 |
show Affected versions of Pip are vulnerable to Command Injection. When installing a package from a Mercurial VCS URL (ie "pip install hg+...") with pip prior to v23.3, the specified Mercurial revision could be used to inject arbitrary configuration options to the "hg clone" call (ie "--config"). Controlling the Mercurial configuration can modify how and which repository is installed. This vulnerability does not affect users who aren't installing from Mercurial. |
pip | 22.0.3 | <25.0 |
show Pip solves a security vulnerability that previously allowed maliciously crafted wheel files to execute unauthorized code during installation. |
wheel | 0.37.1 | <0.38.1 |
show Wheel 0.38.1 includes a fix for CVE-2022-40898: An issue discovered in Python Packaging Authority (PyPA) Wheel 0.37.1 and earlier allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service via attacker controlled input to wheel cli. https://pyup.io/posts/pyup-discovers-redos-vulnerabilities-in-top-python-packages |
requests | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | <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 | 2.23.0 | >=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. |
nbconvert | 5.6.1 | <6.5.1 |
show The GitHub Security Lab discovered sixteen ways to exploit a cross-site scripting vulnerability in nbconvert. When using nbconvert to generate an HTML version of a user-controllable notebook, it is possible to inject arbitrary HTML which may lead to cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities if these HTML notebooks are served by a web server (eg: nbviewer). https://github.com/jupyter/nbconvert/security/advisories/GHSA-9jmq-rx5f-8jwq |
pytest-runner | 5.2 | >0 |
show Pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security mechanisms in pip. For example ‘setup_requires’ and ‘tests_require’ bypass pip --require-hashes. See also pypa/setuptools#1684. It is recommended that you: - Remove 'pytest-runner' from your setup_requires, preferably removing the setup_requires option. - Remove 'pytest' and any other testing requirements from tests_require, preferably removing the tests_requires option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox. https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-runner/blob/289a77b179535d8137118e3b8591d9e727130d6d/README.rst |
https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/python-3-shield.svg
[](https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/)
.. image:: https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/python-3-shield.svg :target: https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/ :alt: Python 3
<a href="https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/"><img src="https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/shield.svg" alt="Python 3" /></a>
!https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/python-3-shield.svg(Python 3)!:https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/
{<img src="https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/python-3-shield.svg" alt="Python 3" />}[https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/]
https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/shield.svg
[](https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/)
.. image:: https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/shield.svg :target: https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/ :alt: Updates
<a href="https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/"><img src="https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/shield.svg" alt="Updates" /></a>
!https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/shield.svg(Updates)!:https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/
{<img src="https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/shield.svg" alt="Updates" />}[https://pyup.io/repos/github/notebooktoall/notebooktoall/]