An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition before 11.4.13, 11.5.x before 11.5.6, and 11.6.x before 11.6.1. It has Incorrect Access Control.
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.
A vulnerability was discovered in GitLab versions before 13.1.10, 13.2.8 and 13.3.4. Due to improper verification of permissions, an unauthorized user can access a private repository within a public project.
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
Membership changes are not reflected in ToDo subscriptions in GitLab versions prior to 13.2.10, 13.3.7 and 13.4.2, allowing guest users to access confidential issues through API.
An authorization issue in the mirroring logic allowed read access to private repositories in GitLab CE/EE 10.6 and later through 13.0.5
Incorrect authorization in GitLab EE affecting all versions from 10.7 prior to 14.10.5, 15.0 prior to 15.0.4, and 15.1 prior to 15.1.1, allowed an attacker already in possession of a valid Deploy Key or a Deploy Token to misuse it from any location to access Container Registries even when IP address restrictions were configured.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab before version 12.10.13 that allowed a project member with limited permissions to view the project security dashboard.
An issue was discovered in Gitlab CE/EE versions >= 13.1 to <13.4.7, >= 13.5 to <13.5.5, and >= 13.6 to <13.6.2 allowed an unauthorized user to access the user list corresponding to a feature flag in a project.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 11.2. Unauthorized Users Can View Custom Project Template
A vulnerability was discovered in GitLab versions before 13.1.10, 13.2.8 and 13.3.4. Project reporters and above could see confidential EPIC attached to confidential issues
Improper access control in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 8.12 before 14.8.6, all versions starting from 14.9 before 14.9.4, and all versions starting from 14.10 before 14.10.1 allows non-project members to access contents of Project Members-only Wikis via malicious CI jobs
Missing filtering in an error message in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions prior to 14.7.7, 14.8 prior to 14.8.5, and 14.9 prior to 14.9.2 exposed sensitive information when an include directive fails in the CI/CD configuration.
An issue has been discovered affecting GitLab versions prior to 14.4.5, between 14.5.0 and 14.5.3, and between 14.6.0 and 14.6.1. GitLab allows a user with an expired password to access sensitive information through RSS feeds.
An issue has been discovered affecting GitLab versions prior to 14.4.5, between 14.5.0 and 14.5.3, and between 14.6.0 and 14.6.1. Gitlab's Slack integration is incorrectly validating user input and allows to craft malicious URLs that are sent to slack.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 12.0 before 14.4.5, all versions starting from 14.5.0 before 14.5.3, all versions starting from 14.6.0 before 14.6.2. GitLab was not verifying that a maintainer of a project had the right access to import members from a target project.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 13.10 before 14.4.5, all versions starting from 14.5.0 before 14.5.3, all versions starting from 14.6.0 before 14.6.2. GitLab was vulnerable to unauthorized access to some particular fields through the GraphQL API.
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 EE/CE 10.8 to 12.9 is leaking metadata and comments on vulnerabilities to unauthorized users on the vulnerability feedback page.
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.x before 11.7.7 and 11.8.x before 11.8.3. It allows Information Disclosure.
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 Enterprise Edition 10.x (starting in 10.6) 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. The merge request approvers section has an access control issue that permits project maintainers to view membership of private groups.
An issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 9.x, 10.x, 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. A user retains their role within a project in a private group after being removed from the group, if their privileges within the project are different from the group.
An Incorrect Access Control (issue 2 of 3) issue was discovered in GitLab Community and Enterprise Edition 8.14 and later but before 11.5.8, 11.6.x before 11.6.6, and 11.7.x before 11.7.1. Guest users were able to view the list of a group's merge requests.
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 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 1 of 3). The contents of an LFS object can be accessed by an unauthorized user, if the file size and OID are known.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 11.4 before 14.5.4, all versions starting from 14.6 before 14.6.4, all versions starting from 14.7 before 14.7.1. GitLab search may allow authenticated users to search other users by their respective private emails even if a user set their email to private.
An issue was discovered in GitLab EE affecting all versions starting from 16.11 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 certain project-level analytics settings could be leaked in DOM to group members with Developer or higher roles.
GitLab EE 8.0 through 12.7.2 has Insecure Permissions (issue 1 of 2).
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.
In all versions of GitLab EE since version 14.1, due to an insecure direct object reference vulnerability, an endpoint may reveal the protected branch name to a malicious user who makes a crafted API call with the ID of the protected branch.
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
In all versions of GitLab EE since version 8.13, an endpoint discloses names of private groups that have access to a project to low privileged users that are part of that project.
An insecure direct object reference vulnerability in GitLab EE affecting all versions from 15.7 prior to 17.6.5, 17.7 prior to 17.7.4, and 17.8 prior to 17.8.2 allows an attacker to view repositories in an unauthorized way.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 13.9. A specially crafted import file could read files on the server.
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions before 13.11.6, all versions starting from 13.12 before 13.12.6, and all versions starting from 14.0 before 14.0.2. Improper access control allows unauthorised users to access project details using Graphql.
An information disclosure vulnerability in GitLab EE versions 13.11 and later allowed a project owner to leak information about the members' on-call rotations in other projects
Improper authorization in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions since 13.0 allows guests in private projects to view CI/CD analytics
The project import/export feature in GitLab 8.9 and greater could be used to obtain otherwise private email addresses
Improper authorization in GitLab 12.8+ allows a guest user in a private project to view tag data that should be inaccessible on the releases page
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting from 13.4. Improper access control allows unauthorized users to access details on analytic pages.
An information disclosure vulnerability in GitLab EE versions 13.10 and later allowed a user to read project details
An issue has been discovered in GitLab affecting all versions starting with 3.0.1. Improper access control allows demoted project members to access details on authored merge requests
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 allows Information Disclosure (issue 5 of 6). A project guest user can view the last commit status of the default branch.
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 issue was discovered in GitLab CE/EE affecting all versions starting from 16.5 prior to 17.1.7, starting from 17.2 prior to 17.2.5, and starting from 17.3 prior to 17.3.2, where dependency proxy credentials are retained in graphql Logs.
Accidental logging of system root password in the migration log in all versions of GitLab CE/EE 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 allows an attacker with local file system access to obtain system root-level privileges