Vulnerabilities (CVE)

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Filtered by vendor Veritas Subscribe
Filtered by product Infoscale Operations Manager
Total 3 CVE
CVE Vendors Products Updated CVSS v2 CVSS v3
CVE-2022-26484 1 Veritas 1 Infoscale Operations Manager 2022-03-11 6.8 MEDIUM 4.9 MEDIUM
An issue was discovered in Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager (VIOM) before 7.4.2 Patch 600 and 8.x before 8.0.0 Patch 100. The web server fails to sanitize admin/cgi-bin/rulemgr.pl/getfile/ input data, allowing a remote authenticated administrator to read arbitrary files on the system via Directory Traversal. By manipulating the resource name in GET requests referring to files with absolute paths, it is possible to access arbitrary files stored on the filesystem, including application source code, configuration files, and critical system files.
CVE-2022-26483 1 Veritas 1 Infoscale Operations Manager 2022-03-11 3.5 LOW 4.8 MEDIUM
An issue was discovered in Veritas InfoScale Operations Manager (VIOM) before 7.4.2 Patch 600 and 8.x before 8.0.0 Patch 100. A reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in admin/cgi-bin/listdir.pl allows authenticated remote administrators to inject arbitrary web script or HTML into an HTTP GET parameter (which reflect the user input without sanitization).
CVE-2020-36166 2 Microsoft, Veritas 5 Windows, Infoscale, Infoscale Operations Manager and 2 more 2021-01-12 7.2 HIGH 8.8 HIGH
An issue was discovered in Veritas InfoScale 7.x through 7.4.2 on Windows, Storage Foundation through 6.1 on Windows, Storage Foundation HA through 6.1 on Windows, and InfoScale Operations Manager (aka VIOM) Windows Management Server 7.x through 7.4.2. On start-up, it loads the OpenSSL library from \usr\local\ssl. This library attempts to load the \usr\local\ssl\openssl.cnf configuration file, which may not exist. On Windows systems, this path could translate to <drive>:\usr\local\ssl\openssl.cnf, where <drive> could be the default Windows installation drive such as C:\ or the drive where a Veritas product is installed. By default, on Windows systems, users can create directories under any top-level directory. A low privileged user can create a <drive>:\usr\local\ssl\openssl.cnf configuration file to load a malicious OpenSSL engine, resulting in arbitrary code execution as SYSTEM when the service starts. This gives the attacker administrator access on the system, allowing the attacker (by default) to access all data, access all installed applications, etc.