Pexip Infinity before 26.2 allows temporary remote Denial of Service (abort) because of missing call-setup input validation.
Pexip Infinity before 26 allows remote denial of service because of missing H.264 input validation (issue 1 of 2).
Pexip Infinity before 26 allows remote denial of service because of missing RTMP input validation.
Pexip Infinity 23.x before 23.3 has improper input validation, leading to a temporary software abort via RTP.
Pexip Infinity 25.x before 25.4 has Improper Input Validation, and thus an unauthenticated remote attacker can cause a denial of service via the administrative web interface.
Pexip Infinity 22.x through 24.x before 24.2 has Improper Input Validation for call setup. An unauthenticated remote attacker can trigger a software abort (temporary loss of service).
Pexip Infinity before 24.1 has Improper Input Validation, leading to temporary denial of service via SIP.
Pexip Infinity before 35.0 has improper input validation that allows remote attackers to trigger a denial of service (software abort) via a crafted signalling message.
Pexip Infinity before 31.2 has Improper Input Validation for signalling, allowing remote attackers to trigger an abort.
Pexip Infinity before 31.2 has Improper Input Validation for RTCP, allowing remote attackers to trigger an abort.
Signalling in Pexip Infinity 29 through 36.2 before 37.0 has improper input validation that allows remote attackers to trigger a temporary denial of service (software abort).
Pexip Infinity 27.x before 27.3 has Improper Input Validation. The client API allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via a gateway call into Teams.
Pexip Infinity before 26 allows temporary remote Denial of Service (abort) because of missing call-setup input validation.
Pexip Infinity before 23.4 has a lack of input validation, leading to temporary denial of service via H.323.
Pexip Infinity before 18 allows remote Denial of Service (XML parsing).
Pexip Infinity before 18 allows Remote Denial of Service (TLS handshakes in RTMP).
Pexip Infinity before 27.3 allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via Epic Telehealth.
Pexip Infinity before 39.0 has Improper Input Validation in the media implementation, allowing a remote attacker to trigger a software abort via a crafted media stream, resulting in a denial of service.
Pexip Infinity 38.0 and 38.1 before 39.0 has insufficient access control in the RTMP implementation, allowing an attacker to disconnect RTMP streams traversing a Proxy Node.
Pexip Infinity 35.0 through 38.1 before 39.0, in non-default configurations that use Direct Media for WebRTC, has Improper Input Validation in signalling that allows an attacker to trigger a software abort, resulting in a temporary denial of service.
Pexip Infinity 27.x before 27.3 allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via the Session Initiation Protocol.
Pexip Infinity before 27.3 allows remote attackers to trigger excessive resource consumption via H.264.
Pexip Infinity 33.0 through 37.0 before 37.1 has improper input validation in signaling that allows an attacker to trigger a software abort, resulting in a denial of service.
Pexip Infinity before 27.3 allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via One Touch Join.
Pexip Infinity 35.0 through 37.2 before 38.0 has Improper Input Validation in signalling that allows an attacker to trigger a software abort, resulting in a denial of service.
Pexip Infinity before 28.1 allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via G.719.
Pexip Infinity 27 before 28.0 allows remote attackers to trigger excessive resource consumption and termination because of registrar resource mishandling.
Pexip Infinity before 27.3 allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via the Session Initiation Protocol.
Pexip Infinity before 27.3 allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via HTTP.
Pexip Infinity 27.x before 27.3 allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via HTTP.
Pexip Infinity before 27.3 allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via One Touch Join.
Pexip Infinity before 27.3 allows remote attackers to trigger a software abort via H.323.
Pexip Infinity before 27.3 allows remote attackers to force a software abort via HTTP.
Pexip Infinity before 37.0 has improper input validation in signalling that allows a remote attacker to trigger a software abort via a crafted signalling message, resulting in a denial of service.
Pexip Infinity before 27.0 has improper WebRTC input validation. An unauthenticated remote attacker can use excessive resources, temporarily causing denial of service.
Pexip Infinity before 14.2 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (service restart) or execute arbitrary code via vectors related to Conferencing Nodes.
Pexip Reverse Proxy and TURN Server before 6.1.0 has Incorrect UDP Access Control via TURN.
Pexip Infinity before 20.1 allows privilege escalation by restoring a system backup.
The compressed packet parser in GnuPG 1.4.x before 1.4.15 and 2.0.x before 2.0.22 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (infinite recursion) via a crafted OpenPGP message.
ns-slapd in 389 Directory Server before 1.3.0.8 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (server crash) via a crafted Distinguished Name (DN) in a MOD operation request.
Cryptocat before 2.0.22 has Remote Denial of Service via username
Multiple array index errors in epan/dissectors/packet-gsm_a_common.c in the GSM A Common dissector in Wireshark 1.8.x before 1.8.9 and 1.10.x before 1.10.1 allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service (application crash) via a crafted packet.
Matrix Synapse before 0.28.1 is prone to a denial of service flaw where malicious events injected with depth = 2^63 - 1 render rooms unusable, related to federation/federation_base.py and handlers/message.py, as exploited in the wild in April 2018.
The HTTP server in Node.js 0.10.x before 0.10.21 and 0.8.x before 0.8.26 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (memory and CPU consumption) by sending a large number of pipelined requests without reading the response.
python before versions 2.7.15, 3.4.9, 3.5.6rc1, 3.6.5rc1 and 3.7.0 is vulnerable to catastrophic backtracking in pop3lib's apop() method. An attacker could use this flaw to cause denial of service.
A vulnerability has been identified in SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 412-1 DP V7 (All versions), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 412-2 DP V7 (All versions), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 414-2 DP V7 (All versions), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 414-3 DP V7 (All versions), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 414-3 PN/DP V7 (All versions < V7.0.3), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 414F-3 PN/DP V7 (All versions < V7.0.3), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 416-2 DP V7 (All versions), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 416-3 DP V7 (All versions), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 416-3 PN/DP V7 (All versions < V7.0.3), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 416F-2 DP V7 (All versions), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 416F-3 PN/DP V7 (All versions < V7.0.3), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 417-4 DP V7 (All versions), SIMATIC S7-400 CPU 412-2 PN V7 (All versions < V7.0.3), SIMATIC S7-400 H V4.5 and below CPU family (incl. SIPLUS variants) (All versions), SIMATIC S7-400 H V6 CPU family (incl. SIPLUS variants) (All versions < V6.0.9), SIMATIC S7-400 PN/DP V6 and below CPU family (incl. SIPLUS variants) (All versions), SIMATIC S7-410 CPU family (incl. SIPLUS variants) (All versions < V8.2.1), SIPLUS S7-400 CPU 414-3 PN/DP V7 (All versions < V7.0.3), SIPLUS S7-400 CPU 416-3 PN/DP V7 (All versions < V7.0.3), SIPLUS S7-400 CPU 416-3 V7 (All versions), SIPLUS S7-400 CPU 417-4 V7 (All versions). Specially crafted packets sent to port 102/tcp via Ethernet interface, via PROFIBUS, or via Multi Point Interfaces (MPI) could cause the affected devices to go into defect mode. Manual reboot is required to resume normal operation. Successful exploitation requires an attacker to be able to send specially crafted packets to port 102/tcp via Ethernet interface, via PROFIBUS or Multi Point Interfaces (MPI). No user interaction and no user privileges are required to exploit the security vulnerability. The vulnerability could allow causing a denial of service condition of the core functionality of the CPU, compromising the availability of the system.
The (1) power and (2) ipmi_boot actions in the HostController in Foreman before 1.2.2 allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service (memory consumption) via unspecified input that is converted to a symbol.
epan/dissectors/packet-dcom-sysact.c in the DCOM ISystemActivator dissector in Wireshark 1.10.x before 1.10.1 does not properly validate certain index values, which allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (assertion failure and application exit) via a crafted packet.
epan/dissectors/packet-dcom-sysact.c in the DCOM ISystemActivator dissector in Wireshark 1.10.x before 1.10.1 does not properly determine whether there is remaining packet data to process, which allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (application crash) via a crafted packet.
python before versions 2.7.15, 3.4.9, 3.5.6rc1, 3.6.5rc1 and 3.7.0 is vulnerable to catastrophic backtracking in the difflib.IS_LINE_JUNK method. An attacker could use this flaw to cause denial of service.