An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.6.10, 11.7.x before 11.7.6, and 11.8.x before 11.8.1. It allows Information Exposure (issue 5 of 5).
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 12.6 before 14.8.6, all versions starting from 14.9 before 14.9.4, all versions starting from 14.10 before 14.10.1. GitLab was not correctly authenticating a user that had some certain amount of information which allowed an user to authenticate without a personal access token.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 10.0 before 14.5.4, all versions starting from 10.1 before 14.6.4, all versions starting from 10.2 before 14.7.1. Private project paths can be disclosed to unauthorized users via system notes when an Issue is closed via a Merge Request and later moved to a public project
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 14.6 before 14.6.5, all versions starting from 14.7 before 14.7.4, all versions starting from 14.8 before 14.8.2. GitLab was leaking user passwords when adding mirrors with SSH credentials under specific conditions.
GitLab 9.4.x before 9.4.2 does not support LDAP SSL certificate verification, but a verify_certificates LDAP option was mentioned in the 9.4 release announcement. This issue occurred because code was not merged. This is related to use of the omniauth-ldap library and the gitlab_omniauth-ldap gem.
A vulnerability was discovered in GitLab versions prior 13.1. Under certain conditions private merge requests could be read via Todos
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE) 8.13 through 12.6.1. It has Incorrect Access Control.
GitLab EE 8.9 and later through 12.7.2 has Insecure Permission
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.6.10, 11.7.x before 11.7.6, and 11.8.x before 11.8.1. It has Incorrect Access Control (issue 2 of 5).
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.6.10, 11.7.x before 11.7.6, and 11.8.x before 11.8.1. It allows Information Exposure (issue 1 of 5).
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.6.10, 11.7.x before 11.7.6, and 11.8.x before 11.8.1. It allows Information Exposure (issue 2 of 5).
An information disclosure vulnerability in GitLab EE affecting all versions from 12.5 prior to 14.10.5, 15.0 prior to 15.0.4, and 15.1 prior to 15.1.1, allows disclosure of release titles if group milestones are associated with any project releases.
GitLab CE 8.17 and later and EE 8.3 and later have a symlink time-of-check-to-time-of-use race condition that would allow unauthorized access to files in the GitLab Pages chroot environment. This is fixed in versions 11.5.1, 11.4.8, and 11.3.11.
Improper authorization in GitLab Pages included with GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions from 11.5 prior to 14.7.7, 14.8 prior to 14.8.5, and 14.9 prior to 14.9.2 allowed an attacker to steal a user's access token on an attacker-controlled private GitLab Pages website and reuse that token on the victim's other private websites
Improper input validation in all versions of GitLab CE/EE using sendmail to send emails allowed an attacker to steal environment variables via specially crafted email addresses.
In all versions of GitLab CE/EE since version 8.9, project exports may expose trigger tokens configured on that project.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting with 12.6. Under a special condition it was possible to access data of an internal repository through a public project fork as an anonymous user.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 13.8 before 14.0.9, all versions starting from 14.1 before 14.1.4, all versions starting from 14.2 before 14.2.2. Under specialized conditions, an invited group member may continue to have access to a project even after the invited group, which the member was part of, is deleted.
Insufficient validation of authentication parameters in GitLab Pages for GitLab 11.5+ allows an attacker to steal a victim's API token if they click on a maliciously crafted link
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting with 12.8. Under a special condition it was possible to access data of an internal repository through project fork done by a project member.
When requests to the internal network for webhooks are enabled, a server-side request forgery vulnerability in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 10.5 was possible to exploit for an unauthenticated attacker even on a GitLab instance where registration is limited
A cross-site leak vulnerability in the OAuth flow of all versions of GitLab CE/EE since 7.10 allowed an attacker to leak an OAuth access token by getting the victim to visit a malicious page with Safari
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.2.7, 11.3.x before 11.3.8, and 11.4.x before 11.4.3. It has Information Exposure Through Browser Caching.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community Edition 11.x before 11.1.8, 11.2.x before 11.2.5, and 11.3.x before 11.3.2. There is Information Exposure via Epic change descriptions.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community Edition 11.x before 11.1.8, 11.2.x before 11.2.5, and 11.3.x before 11.3.2. There is Information Exposure via the GFM markdown API.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.2.7, 11.3.x before 11.3.8, and 11.4.x before 11.4.3. It has Information Exposure Through an Error Message.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.0.6, 11.1.x before 11.1.5, and 11.2.x before 11.2.2. There is Orphaned Upload Files Exposure.
In all versions of GitLab CE/EE since version 10.6, a project export leaks the external webhook token value which may allow access to the project which it was exported from.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 7.9 through 12.2.1. EXIF Geolocation data was not being removed from certain image uploads.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.x before 11.7.7 and 11.8.x before 11.8.3. It allows Information Disclosure.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 12.9 before 15.1.6, all versions starting from 15.2 before 15.2.4, all versions starting from 15.3 before 15.3.2. It was possible to read repository content by an unauthorised user if a project member used a crafted link.
Amazon EKS credentials disclosure in GitLab CE/EE 12.6 and later through 13.0.1 allows other administrators to view Amazon EKS credentials via HTML source code
A specially crafted request could be used to confirm the existence of files hosted on object storage services, without disclosing their contents. This vulnerability affects GitLab CE/EE 12.10 and later through 13.0.1
Kubernetes cluster token disclosure in GitLab CE/EE 10.3 and later through 13.0.1 allows other group maintainers to view Kubernetes cluster token
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE) 5.1 through 12.6.1. It has Incorrect Access Control.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 13.4 before 13.6.2. Information disclosure via GraphQL results in user email being unexpectedly visible.
Information disclosure via GraphQL in GitLab CE/EE 13.1 and later exposes private group and project membership. This affects versions >=13.6 to <13.6.2, >=13.5 to <13.5.5, and >=13.1 to <13.4.7.
GitLab EE/CE 8.17 to 12.9 is vulnerable to information leakage when querying a merge request widget.
GitLab 11.7 through 12.8.1 allows Information Disclosure. Under certain group conditions, group epic information was unintentionally being disclosed.
An issue was discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 15.6 prior to 17.0.5, starting from 17.1 prior to 17.1.3, and starting from 17.2 prior to 17.2.1 where it was possible to disclose limited information of an exported group or project to another user.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 13.9 before 17.0.6, all versions starting from 17.1 before 17.1.4, all versions starting from 17.2 before 17.2.2. Under certain conditions, access tokens may have been logged when an API request was made in a specific manner.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.6.10, 11.7.x before 11.7.6, and 11.8.x before 11.8.1. It allows Information Exposure (issue 3 of 5).
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.6.10, 11.7.x before 11.7.6, and 11.8.x before 11.8.1. It has Incorrect Access Control (issue 5 of 5).
An information disclosure issue was discovered in GitLab CE/EE 8.14 and later, by using the move issue feature which could result in disclosure of the newly created issue ID.
An Incorrect Access Control issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.7.x before 11.7.4. GitLab Releases were vulnerable to an authorization issue that allowed users to view confidential issue and merge request titles of other projects.
An information disclosure issue was discovered GitLab versions < 12.1.2, < 12.0.4, and < 11.11.6 in the security dashboard which could result in disclosure of vulnerability feedback information.
An authorization issue was discovered in the GitLab CE/EE CI badge images endpoint which could result in disclosure of the build status. This vulnerability was addressed in 12.1.2, 12.0.4, and 11.11.6.
Multiple versions of GitLab expose sensitive user credentials when assigning a user to an issue or merge request. A fix was included in versions 8.15.8, 8.16.7, and 8.17.4, which were released on March 20th 2017 at 23:59 UTC.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.3 through 12.3 when a sub group epic is added to a public group. It has Incorrect Access Control.
GitLab Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE). 9.6 and later through 12.5 has Incorrect Access Control.