An issue was discovered in GitLab CE and EE 8.15 through 12.9.2. Members of a group could still have access after the group is deleted.
GitLab Enterprise Edition (EE) 9.0 and later through 12.5 allows Information Disclosure.
GitLab Enterprise Edition (EE) 8.90 and later through 12.5 has Incorrect Access Control.
Gitlab Enterprise Edition (EE) before 12.5.1 has Insecure Permissions (issue 1 of 2).
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition through 12.4. It has Insecure Permissions (issue 4 of 4).
GitLab EE/CE 11.1 through 12.9 is vulnerable to parameter tampering on an upload feature that allows an unauthorized user to read content available under specific folders.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab EE affecting all versions affecting all versions from 11.11 prior to 16.2.8, 16.3 prior to 16.3.5, and 16.4 prior to 16.4.1. Single Sign On restrictions were not correctly enforced for indirect project members accessing public members-only project repositories.
GitLab before 12.8.2 has Incorrect Access Control. It was internally discovered that the LFS import process could potentially be used to incorrectly access LFS objects not owned by the user.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 11.3 through 12.4. It has Insecure Permissions.
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 improper authorization issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 11.8 before 16.2.8, all versions starting from 16.3 before 16.3.5 and all versions starting from 16.4 before 16.4.1. It allows a project reporter to leak the owner's Sentry instance projects.
An issue was discovered in GitLab EE affecting all versions starting from 16.0 prior to 16.11.5, starting from 17.0 prior to 17.0.3, and starting from 17.1 prior to 17.1.1, which allows an attacker to access issues and epics without having an SSO session using Duo Chat.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 10.0 before 12.9.8, all versions starting from 12.10 before 12.10.7, all versions starting from 13.0 before 13.0.1. A user with the role of developer could use the import project feature to leak CI/CD variables.
GitLab Enterprise Edition (EE) before 8.17.7, 9.0.11, 9.1.8, 9.2.8, and 9.3.8 allows an authenticated user with the ability to create a project to use the mirroring feature to potentially read repositories belonging to other users.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab DAST scanner affecting all versions starting from 3.0.29 before 4.0.5, in which the DAST scanner leak cross site cookies on redirect during authorization.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 13.7 before 15.11.10, all versions starting from 16.0 before 16.0.6, all versions starting from 16.1 before 16.1.1, which allows an attacker to leak the email address of a user who created a service desk issue.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab EE affecting all versions starting from 15.7 before 15.10.8, all versions starting from 15.11 before 15.11.7, all versions starting from 16.0 before 16.0.2. It was possible to disclose issue notes to an unauthorized user at project export.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 12.9 before 16.0.8, all versions starting from 16.1 before 16.1.3, all versions starting from 16.2 before 16.2.2. It was possible to leak a user's email via an error message for groups that restrict membership by email domain.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab DAST API scanner affecting all versions starting from 1.6.50 before 2.11.0, where Authorization headers was leaked in vulnerability report evidence.
An information disclosure issue in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 13.11 prior to 16.2.8, 16.3 prior to 16.3.5, and 16.4 prior to 16.4.1 allows an attacker to extract non-protected CI/CD variables by tricking a user to visit a fork with a malicious CI/CD configuration.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 10.x (starting in 10.7) and 11.x before 11.5.8, 11.6.x before 11.6.6, and 11.7.x before 11.7.1. It has Incorrect Access Control. System notes contain an access control issue that permits a guest user to view merge request titles.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 10.x and 11.x before 11.5.10, 11.6.x before 11.6.8, and 11.7.x before 11.7.3. It has Incorrect Access Control. The GitLab pipelines feature is vulnerable to authorization issues that allow unauthorized users to view job information.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.5.8, 11.6.x before 11.6.6, and 11.7.x before 11.7.1. It has Incorrect Access Control (issue 3 of 3). When a project with visibility more permissive than the target group is imported, it will retain its prior visibility.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.5.8, 11.6.x before 11.6.6, and 11.7.x before 11.7.1. It allows Information Disclosure (issue 4 of 6). In some cases, users without project permissions will receive emails after a project move. For private projects, this will disclose the new project namespace to an unauthorized user.
An Incorrect Access Control issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.5.8, 11.6.x before 11.6.6, and 11.7.x before 11.7.1. The GitLab API allowed project Maintainers and Owners to view the trigger tokens of other project users.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.5.8, 11.6.x before 11.6.6, and 11.7.x before 11.7.1. It allows Information Disclosure (issue 5 of 6). A project guest user can view the last commit status of the default branch.
An IDOR was discovered in GitLab CE/EE 11.5 and later that allowed new merge requests endpoint to disclose label names.
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.
Permissions rules were not applied while issues were moved between projects of the same group in GitLab versions starting with 10.6 and up to 14.1.7 allowing users to read confidential Epic references.
Lack of an access control check in the External Status Check feature allowed any authenticated user to retrieve the configuration of any External Status Check in GitLab EE starting from 14.1 before 14.3.6, all versions starting from 14.4 before 14.4.4, all versions starting from 14.5 before 14.5.2.
An improper access control flaw in all versions of GitLab CE/EE starting from 13.9 before 14.2.6, all versions starting from 14.3 before 14.3.4, and all versions starting from 14.4 before 14.4.1 exposes private email address of Issue and Merge Requests assignee to Webhook data consumers
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.
Information disclosure from SendEntry in GitLab starting with 10.8 allowed exposure of full URL of artifacts stored in object-storage with a temporary availability via Rails logs.
GitLab versions 8.9.x and above contain a critical security flaw in the "import/export project" feature of GitLab. Added in GitLab 8.9, this feature allows a user to export and then re-import their projects as tape archive files (tar). All GitLab versions prior to 8.13.0 restricted this feature to administrators only. Starting with version 8.13.0 this feature was made available to all users. This feature did not properly check for symbolic links in user-provided archives and therefore it was possible for an authenticated user to retrieve the contents of any file accessible to the GitLab service account. This included sensitive files such as those that contain secret tokens used by the GitLab service to authenticate users. GitLab CE and EE versions 8.13.0 through 8.13.2, 8.12.0 through 8.12.7, 8.11.0 through 8.11.10, 8.10.0 through 8.10.12, and 8.9.0 through 8.9.11 are affected.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 11.8 before 15.5.7, all versions starting from 15.6 before 15.6.4, all versions starting from 15.7 before 15.7.2. A malicious Maintainer can leak the sentry token by changing the configured URL in the Sentry error tracking settings page.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab EE affecting all versions starting from 13.12 before 16.1.5, all versions starting from 16.2 before 16.2.5, all versions starting from 16.3 before 16.3.1 in which a project member can leak credentials stored in site profile.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions before 15.9.6, all versions starting from 15.10 before 15.10.5, all versions starting from 15.11 before 15.11.1. Under certain conditions, an attacker may be able to map a private email of a GitLab user to their GitLab account on an instance.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 12.8 before 15.7.8, all versions starting from 15.8 before 15.8.4, all versions starting from 15.9 before 15.9.2. This vulnerability could allow a user to unmask the Discord Webhook URL through viewing the raw API response.
An info leak issue was identified in all versions of GitLab EE from 13.7 prior to 15.4.6, 15.5 prior to 15.5.5, and 15.6 prior to 15.6.1 which exposes user email id through webhook payload.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 15.3 before 15.7.8, versions of 15.8 before 15.8.4, and version 15.9 before 15.9.2. Google IAP details in Prometheus integration were not hidden, could be leaked from instance, group, or project settings to other users.
An improper authorization issue in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions from 14.4 prior to 15.3.5, 15.4 prior to 15.4.4, and 15.5 prior to 15.5.2 allows an attacker to read variables set directly in a GitLab CI/CD configuration file they don't have access to.
It was possible for a guest user to read a todo targeting an inaccessible note in Gitlab CE/EE affecting all versions from 15.0 prior to 15.2.5, 15.3 prior to 15.3.4, and 15.4 prior to 15.4.1.
Email addresses were leaked in WebHook logs in GitLab EE affecting all versions from 9.3 prior to 15.2.5, 15.3 prior to 15.3.4, and 15.4 prior to 15.4.1
Gitlab Enterprise Edition (EE) before 12.5.1 has Insecure Permissions (issue 2 of 2).
GitLab Enterprise Edition (EE) 11.9 and later through 12.5 has Insecure Permissions.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 12.4. It has Incorrect Access Control.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 12.4 in the Project labels feature. It has Insecure Permissions.
An improper access control issue in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting before 15.1.6, all versions from 15.2 before 15.2.4, all versions from 15.3 before 15.3.2 allows disclosure of pipeline status to unauthorized users.
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.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 12.4. It has Insecure Permissions.