Freebsd : Security Vulnerabilities, CVEs, Published In 1999 (Denial of service)
FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD allow an attacker to cause a denial of service by creating a large number of socket pairs using the socketpair function, setting a large buffer size via setsockopt, then writing large buffers.
Max CVSS
2.1
EPSS Score
0.07%
Published
1999-09-05
Updated
2017-10-10
FreeBSD 3.2 and possibly other versions allows a local user to cause a denial of service (panic) with a large number accesses of an NFS v3 mounted directory from a large number of processes.
Max CVSS
2.1
EPSS Score
0.06%
Published
1999-09-02
Updated
2008-09-05
Operating systems with shared memory implementations based on BSD 4.4 code allow a user to conduct a denial of service and bypass memory limits (e.g., as specified with rlimits) using mmap or shmget to allocate memory and cause page faults.
Max CVSS
5.0
EPSS Score
0.58%
Published
1999-07-15
Updated
2017-12-19
Vulnerability when Network Address Translation (NAT) is enabled in Linux 2.2.10 and earlier with ipchains, or FreeBSD 3.2 with ipfw, allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (kernel panic) via a ping -R (record route) command.
Max CVSS
5.0
EPSS Score
1.52%
Published
1999-12-31
Updated
2016-10-18
FreeBSD VFS cache (vfs_cache) allows local users to cause a denial of service by opening a large number of files.
Max CVSS
2.1
EPSS Score
0.04%
Published
1999-09-22
Updated
2008-09-09
ip_input.c in BSD-derived TCP/IP implementations allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (crash or hang) via crafted packets.
Max CVSS
5.0
EPSS Score
0.38%
Published
1999-12-30
Updated
2010-12-16
6 vulnerabilities found