In JetBrains TeamCity version before 2022.10, Password parameters could be exposed in the build log if they contained special characters
Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File vulnerability in WP 2FA allows Accessing Functionality Not Properly Constrained by ACLs.This issue affects WP 2FA: from n/a through 2.6.3.
IBM Db2 for Linux, UNIX and Windows 10.5, 11.1, and 11.5 is vulnerable to an Information Disclosure as sensitive information may be included in a log file. IBM X-Force ID: 241677.
In Apache Airflow versions before 3.1.6, and 2.11.1 the proxies and proxy fields within a Connection may include proxy URLs containing embedded authentication information. These fields were not treated as sensitive by default and therefore were not automatically masked in log output. As a result, when such connections are rendered or printed to logs, proxy credentials embedded in these fields could be exposed. Users are recommended to upgrade to 3.1.6 or later for Airflow 3, and 2.11.1 or later for Airflow 2 which fixes this issue
In NOKIA 1350 OMS R14.2, an Insertion of Sensitive Information into an Application Log File vulnerability occurs. The web application stores critical information, such as cleartext user credentials, in world-readable files in the filesystem.
Ilevia EVE X1 Server version ≤ 4.7.18.0.eden contains a vulnerability in its server-side logging mechanism that allows unauthenticated remote attackers to retrieve plaintext credentials from exposed .log files. This flaw enables full authentication bypass and system compromise through credential reuse.
The web server Monkeyd produces a world-readable log (/var/log/monkeyd/master.log) on gentoo.
An issue was discovered in the GNU C Library (glibc) 2.36. When the syslog function is passed a crafted input string larger than 1024 bytes, it reads uninitialized memory from the heap and prints it to the target log file, potentially revealing a portion of the contents of the heap.
HashiCorp Consul Template up to 0.27.2, 0.28.2, and 0.29.1 may expose the contents of Vault secrets in the error returned by the *template.Template.Execute method, when given a template using Vault secret contents incorrectly. Fixed in 0.27.3, 0.28.3, and 0.29.2.
Moodle before 2.2.2 has users' private files included in course backups
Exposure of Sensitive Information to an Unauthorized Actor, Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File vulnerability in Apache IoTDB JDBC driver. This issue affects iotdb-jdbc: from 0.10.0 through 1.3.3, from 2.0.1-beta before 2.0.2. Users are recommended to upgrade to version 2.0.2 and 1.3.4, which fix the issue.
A vulnerability in Brocade SANnav before v2.3.1 and v2.3.0a prints the encryption key in the console when a privileged user executes the script to replace the Brocade SANnav Management Portal standby node. This could provide attackers an additional, less protected path to acquiring the encryption key.
When Brocade SANnav before v2.3.1 and v2.3.0a servers are configured in Disaster Recovery mode, the encryption key is stored in the DR log files. This could provide attackers with an additional, less-protected path to acquiring the encryption key.
Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File vulnerability in Code Parrots Easy Forms for Mailchimp.This issue affects Easy Forms for Mailchimp: from n/a through 6.9.0.
Insertion of debug information into log file during building the elastic search index allows reading of sensitive information from articles.This issue affects OTRS: from 7.0.X through 7.0.48, from 8.0.X through 8.0.37, from 2023.X through 2023.1.1.
An issue was discovered whereby APM Server could log at ERROR level, a response from Elasticsearch indicating that indexing the document failed and that response would contain parts of the original document. Depending on the nature of the document that the APM Server attempted to ingest, this could lead to the insertion of sensitive or private information in the APM Server logs.
A vulnerability in Cisco Smart Licensing Utility could allow an unauthenticated, remote attacker to access sensitive information. This vulnerability is due to excessive verbosity in a debug log file. An attacker could exploit this vulnerability by sending a crafted HTTP request to an affected device. A successful exploit could allow the attacker to obtain log files that contain sensitive data, including credentials that can be used to access the API.
The Registration Forms – User Registration Forms, Invitation-Based Registrations, Front-end User Profile, Login Form & Content Restriction plugin for WordPress is vulnerable to Sensitive Information Exposure in all versions up to, and including, 3.8.3.9 through publicly exposed log files. This makes it possible for unauthenticated attackers to view potentially sensitive information about users contained in the exposed log files.
WAVLINK WN579 X3 M79X3.V5030.191012/M79X3.V5030.191012 contains an information leak which allows attackers to obtain the key information via accessing the messages.txt page.
Dell PowerScale OneFS, versions 9.0.0 up to and including 9.1.0.20, 9.2.1.13, 9.3.0.6, and 9.4.0.3 , contain an insertion of sensitive information in log files vulnerability. A remote unprivileged attacker could potentially exploit this vulnerability, leading to exposure of this sensitive data.
An issue was discovered in Couchbase Server before 7.0.4. The Backup Service log leaks unredacted usernames and document ids.
The PayHere Payment Gateway WordPress plugin before 2.2.12 automatically creates publicly-accessible log files containing sensitive information when transactions occur.
Information disclosure in aspx pages in MV's IDCE application v1.0 allows an attacker to copy and paste aspx pages in the end of the URL application that connect into the database which reveals internal and sensitive information without logging into the web application.
ReQuest Serious Play F3 Media Server versions 7.0.3.4968 (Pro), 7.0.2.4954, 6.5.2.4954, 6.4.2.4681, 6.3.2.4203, and 2.0.1.823 allows unauthenticated attackers to disclose the webserver's Python debug log file containing system information, credentials, paths, processes and command arguments running on the device. Attackers can access sensitive information by visiting the message_log page.
Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File vulnerability in Ghost Foundation Ghost.This issue affects Ghost: from n/a through 1.4.0.
An issue was discovered in Couchbase Server before 7.0.4. A private key is leaked to the log files with certain crashes.
The OpenVPN Access Server installer creates a log file readable for everyone, which from version 2.10.0 and before 2.11.0 may contain a random generated admin password
A vulnerability has been identified in SINEMA Remote Connect Server (All versions < V3.1). A customized HTTP POST request could force the application to write the status of a given user to a log file, exposing sensitive user information that could provide valuable guidance to an attacker.
Information exposure vulnerability in Shenzhen Reachfar v28, the exploitation of which could allow a remote attacker to retrieve all the week's logs stored in the 'log2' directory. An attacker could retrieve sensitive information such as remembered wifi networks, sent messages, SOS device locations and device configurations.
Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File vulnerability in Searchiq SearchIQ.This issue affects SearchIQ: from n/a through 4.5.
Exposure of Sensitive Information to an Unauthorized Actor vulnerability in Naa986 WP Stripe Checkout.This issue affects WP Stripe Checkout: from n/a through 1.2.2.37.
OpenBao is an open source identity-based secrets management system. In versions 2.2.0 to 2.4.1, OpenBao's audit log experienced a regression wherein raw HTTP bodies used by few endpoints were not correctly redacted (HMAC'd). This impacts those using the ACME functionality of PKI, resulting in short-lived ACME verification challenge codes being leaked in the audit logs. Additionally, this impacts those using the OIDC issuer functionality of the identity subsystem, auth and token response codes along with claims could be leaked in the audit logs. ACME verification codes are not usable after verification or challenge expiry so are of limited long-term use. This issue has been patched in OpenBao 2.4.2.
Headscale through 0.22.3 writes bearer tokens to info-level logs.
Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File vulnerability in Apache Airflow Celery provider, Apache Airflow. Sensitive information logged as clear text when rediss, amqp, rpc protocols are used as Celery result backend Note: the vulnerability is about the information exposed in the logs not about accessing the logs. This issue affects Apache Airflow Celery provider: from 3.3.0 through 3.4.0; Apache Airflow: from 1.10.0 through 2.6.3. Users are recommended to upgrade Airflow Celery provider to version 3.4.1 and Apache Airlfow to version 2.7.0 which fixes the issue.
The N-able PassPortal extension before 3.29.2 for Chrome inserts sensitive information into a log file.
Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File vulnerability in GSheetConnector CF7 Google Sheets Connector.This issue affects CF7 Google Sheets Connector: from n/a through 5.0.5.
An issue was discovered on Samsung mobile devices with Q(10.0) and R(11.0) (Exynos chipsets) software. They allow attackers to obtain sensitive information by reading a log. The Samsung ID is SVE-2020-18596 (October 2020).
Information Exposure Through Log Files vulnerability discovered in Foundry when logs were captured using an underlying library known as Build2. This issue was present in versions earlier than 1.785.0. Upgrade to Build2 version 1.785.0 or greater.
Information Exposure Through Log Files vulnerability discovered in Foundry Code-Workbooks where the endpoint backing that console was generating service log records of any Python code being run. These service logs included the Foundry token that represents the Code-Workbooks Python console. Upgrade to Code-Workbooks version 4.461.0. This issue affects Palantir Foundry Code-Workbooks version 4.144 to version 4.460.0 and is resolved in 4.461.0.
TPCMS v3.2 allows attackers to access the ThinkPHP log directory and obtain sensitive information such as the administrator's user name and password.
The Reporting module in Aseco Lietuva document management system DVS Avilys before 3.5.58 allows unauthorized file download. An unauthenticated attacker can impersonate an administrator by reading administrative files.
Possible Insertion of Sensitive Information into Log File Vulnerability in Identity Manager has been discovered in OpenText™ Identity Manager REST Driver. This impact version before 1.1.2.0200.
An issue discovered in Unisys Stealth 5.3.062.0 allows attackers to view sensitive information via the Enterprise ManagementInstaller_msi.log file.
MonoCMS Blog 1.0 stores hard-coded admin hashes in the log.xml file in the source files for MonoCMS Blog. Hash type is bcrypt and hashcat mode 3200 can be used to crack the hash.
Planning Analytics Cartridge for Cloud Pak for Data 4.0 exposes sensitive information in logs which could lead an attacker to exploit this vulnerability to conduct further attacks. IBM X-Force ID: 247896.
The Jupyter notebook is a web-based notebook environment for interactive computing. Prior to version 6.4.9, unauthorized actors can access sensitive information from server logs. Anytime a 5xx error is triggered, the auth cookie and other header values are recorded in Jupyter server logs by default. Considering these logs do not require root access, an attacker can monitor these logs, steal sensitive auth/cookie information, and gain access to the Jupyter server. Jupyter notebook version 6.4.x contains a patch for this issue. There are currently no known workarounds.
Spinnaker is an open source, multi-cloud continuous delivery platform for releasing software changes, and Spinnaker's Rosco microservice produces machine images. Rosco prior to versions 1.29.2, 1.28.4, and 1.27.3 does not property mask secrets generated via packer builds. This can lead to exposure of sensitive AWS credentials in packer log files. Versions 1.29.2, 1.28.4, and 1.27.3 of Rosco contain fixes for this issue. A workaround is available. It's recommended to use short lived credentials via role assumption and IAM profiles. Additionally, credentials can be set in `/home/spinnaker/.aws/credentials` and `/home/spinnaker/.aws/config` as a volume mount for Rosco pods vs. setting credentials in roscos bake config properties. Last even with those it's recommend to use IAM Roles vs. long lived credentials. This drastically mitigates the risk of credentials exposure. If users have used static credentials, it's recommended to purge any bake logs for AWS, evaluate whether AWS_ACCESS_KEY, SECRET_KEY and/or other sensitive data has been introduced in log files and bake job logs. Then, rotate these credentials and evaluate potential improper use of those credentials.
In Octopus Deploy 2020.3.x before 2020.3.4 and 2020.4.x before 2020.4.1, if an authenticated user creates a deployment or runbook process using Azure steps and sets the step's execution location to run on the server/worker, then (under certain circumstances) the account password is exposed in cleartext in the verbose task logs output.
In Apache NiFi 0.0.1 to 1.11.0, the flow fingerprint factory generated flow fingerprints which included sensitive property descriptor values. In the event a node attempted to join a cluster and the cluster flow was not inheritable, the flow fingerprint of both the cluster and local flow was printed, potentially containing sensitive values in plaintext.
Weave GitOps is a simple open source developer platform for people who want cloud native applications, without needing Kubernetes expertise. A vulnerability in the logging of Weave GitOps could allow an authenticated remote attacker to view sensitive cluster configurations, aka KubeConfg, of registered Kubernetes clusters, including the service account tokens in plain text from Weave GitOps's pod logs on the management cluster. An unauthorized remote attacker can also view these sensitive configurations from external log storage if enabled by the management cluster. This vulnerability is due to the client factory dumping cluster configurations and their service account tokens when the cluster manager tries to connect to an API server of a registered cluster, and a connection error occurs. An attacker could exploit this vulnerability by either accessing logs of a pod of Weave GitOps, or from external log storage and obtaining all cluster configurations of registered clusters. A successful exploit could allow the attacker to use those cluster configurations to manage the registered Kubernetes clusters. This vulnerability has been fixed by commit 567356f471353fb5c676c77f5abc2a04631d50ca. Users should upgrade to Weave GitOps core version v0.8.1-rc.6 or newer. There is no known workaround for this vulnerability.