| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 8.0 could allow an authenticated user to crash the MQ channel due to improper data conversion handling. IBM Reference #: 1998661. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 8.0 and 9.0 could allow an authenticated user to cause a shared memory leak by MQ applications using dynamic queues, which can lead to lack of resources for other MQ applications. IBM X-Force ID: 125144. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 8.0 and 9.0 could allow, under special circumstances, an unauthorized user to access an object which they should have been denied access. IBM X-Force ID: 126456. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 8.0 could allow an authenticated user to cause a premature termination of a client application thread which could potentially cause denial of service. IBM X-Force ID: 123914. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 8.0 could allow an authenticated user with access to the queue manager and queue, to deny service to other channels running under the same process. IBM Reference #: 1998649. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 8.0 could allow an authenticated user with queue manager permissions to cause a segmentation fault which would result in the box having to be rebooted to resume normal operations. IBM Reference #: 1998663. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 9.0.2 could allow an authenticated user to potentially cause a denial of service by saving an incorrect channel status inquiry. IBM X-Force ID: 124354 |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 7.5, 8.0, and 9.0 could allow a local user to crash the queue manager agent thread and expose some sensitive information. IBM X-Force ID: 126454. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 9.0.1 and 9.0.2 could allow a local user with ability to run or enable trace, to obtain sensitive information from WebSphere Application Server traces including user credentials. IBM X-Force ID: 125145. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 8.x before 8.0.0.1 does not properly enforce CHLAUTH rules for blocking client connections in certain circumstances related to the CONNAUTH attribute, which allows remote authenticated users to bypass intended queue-manager access restrictions via unspecified vectors. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 7.0.1 before 7.0.1.13, 7.1 before 7.1.0.6, 7.5 before 7.5.0.5, and 8 before 8.0.0.1 allows remote authenticated users to cause a denial of service (queue-slot exhaustion) by leveraging PCF query privileges for a crafted query. |
| inetd in IBM WebSphere MQ 7.1.x before 7.1.0.5 and 7.5.x before 7.5.0.4 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (disk or CPU consumption) via unspecified vectors. |
| The command-port listener in IBM WebSphere MQ Internet Pass-Thru (MQIPT) 2.x before 2.1.0.1 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (remote-administration outage) via unspecified vectors. |
| Directory traversal vulnerability in WMQ Telemetry in IBM WebSphere MQ 7.5 before 7.5.0.3 allows remote attackers to read arbitrary files via a crafted URI. |
| IBM MQ Light before 1.0.0.2 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (disk consumption) via a crafted byte sequence in authentication data, a different vulnerability than CVE-2015-1956 and CVE-2015-1958. |
| runmqsc in IBM WebSphere MQ 8.x before 8.0.0.5 allows local users to bypass intended queue-manager command access restrictions by leveraging authority for +connect and +dsp. |
| runmqsc in IBM WebSphere MQ 8.x before 8.0.0.5 allows local users to bypass an intended +dsp authority requirement and obtain sensitive information via unspecified display commands. |
| MQ Explorer in IBM WebSphere MQ before 8.0.0.3 does not recognize the absence of the compatibility-mode option, which allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive information by sniffing the network for a session in which TLS is not used. |
| IBM WebSphere MQ 8.0.0.4 on IBM i platforms allows local users to discover cleartext certificate-keystore passwords within MQ trace output by leveraging administrator privileges to execute the mqcertck program. |
| Memory leak in queue-manager agents in IBM WebSphere MQ 8.x before 8.0.0.5 allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (heap memory consumption) by triggering many errors. |