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OVAL

CESA-2013:0217 -- centos 6 mingw32-libxml2

ID: oval:org.secpod.oval:def:202536Date: (C)2013-02-06   (M)2023-11-16
Class: PATCHFamily: unix




These packages provide the libxml2 library, a development toolbox providing the implementation of various XML standards, for users of MinGW . IMPORTANT NOTE: The mingw32 packages in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 will no longer be updated proactively and will be deprecated with the release of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4. These packages were provided to support other capabilities in Red Hat Enterprise Linux and were not intended for direct customer use. Customers are advised to not use these packages with immediate effect. Future updates to these packages will be at Red Hat"s discretion and these packages may be removed in a future minor release. A heap-based buffer overflow flaw was found in the way libxml2 decoded entity references with long names. A remote attacker could provide a specially-crafted XML file that, when opened in an application linked against libxml2, would cause the application to crash or, potentially, execute arbitrary code with the privileges of the user running the application. A heap-based buffer underflow flaw was found in the way libxml2 decoded certain entities. A remote attacker could provide a specially-crafted XML file that, when opened in an application linked against libxml2, would cause the application to crash or, potentially, execute arbitrary code with the privileges of the user running the application. It was found that the hashing routine used by libxml2 arrays was susceptible to predictable hash collisions. Sending a specially-crafted message to an XML service could result in longer processing time, which could lead to a denial of service. To mitigate this issue, randomization has been added to the hashing function to reduce the chance of an attacker successfully causing intentional collisions. Multiple flaws were found in the way libxml2 parsed certain XPath expressions. If an attacker were able to supply a specially-crafted XML file to an application using libxml2, as well as an XPath expression for that application to run against the crafted file, it could cause the application to crash. Two heap-based buffer overflow flaws were found in the way libxml2 decoded certain XML files. A remote attacker could provide a specially-crafted XML file that, when opened in an application linked against libxml2, would cause the application to crash or, potentially, execute arbitrary code with the privileges of the user running the application. An integer overflow flaw, leading to a heap-based buffer overflow, was found in the way libxml2 parsed certain XPath expressions. If an attacker were able to supply a specially-crafted XML file to an application using libxml2, as well as an XPath expression for that application to run against the crafted file, it could cause the application to crash or, possibly, execute arbitrary code. An out-of-bounds memory read flaw was found in libxml2. A remote attacker could provide a specially-crafted XML file that, when opened in an application linked against libxml2, would cause the application to crash. Red Hat would like to thank the Google Security Team for reporting the CVE-2010-4008 issue. Upstream acknowledges Bui Quang Minh from Bkis as the original reporter of CVE-2010-4008. All users of mingw32-libxml2 are advised to upgrade to these updated packages, which contain backported patches to correct these issues.

Platform:
CentOS 6
Product:
mingw32-libxml2
Reference:
CESA-2013:0217
CVE-2010-4008
CVE-2010-4494
CVE-2011-0216
CVE-2011-1944
CVE-2011-2821
CVE-2011-2834
CVE-2011-3102
CVE-2011-3905
CVE-2011-3919
CVE-2012-0841
CVE-2012-5134
CVE    11
CVE-2011-0216
CVE-2011-3102
CVE-2011-3905
CVE-2012-0841
...
CPE    2
cpe:/o:centos:centos:6
cpe:/a:xmlsoft:mingw32-libxml2

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