| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| In Eclipse ThreadX before 6.4.3, when memory protection is enabled, syscall parameters verification wasn't enough, allowing an attacker to obtain an arbitrary memory read/write. |
| In Eclipse ThreadX before version 6.4.3, an attacker can cause a denial of service (crash) by providing a pointer to a reserved or unmapped memory region. Vulnerable system calls had a check of pointers, but that check wasn't verifying whether the pointer is outside the module memory region. |
| In NetX Duo before 6.4.4, the networking support module for Eclipse Foundation ThreadX, there was a potential out of bound read issue in _nx_ip_packet_receive() function when received an Ethernet with type set as IP but no IP data. |
| In NetX Duo before 6.4.4, the networking support module for Eclipse Foundation ThreadX, there was a potential out of bound read issue in _nx_ipv4_packet_receive() function when received an Ethernet frame with less than 4 bytes of IP packet. |
| In NetX Duo version before 6.4.4, the component of Eclipse Foundation ThreadX, there was an incorrect bound check in_nx_secure_tls_proc_clienthello_supported_versions_extension() in the extension version field. |
| In NetX Duo version before 6.4.4, the component of Eclipse Foundation ThreadX, there was a potential out of bound read in _nx_secure_tls_process_clienthello() because of a missing validation of PSK length provided in the user message. |
| In FileX before 6.4.2, the file support module for Eclipse Foundation ThreadX, there was a possible buffer overflow in the FileX RAM disk driver. It could cause a remote execurtion after receiving a crafted sequence of packets |
| Hono is a Web application framework that provides support for any JavaScript runtime. Hono CSRF middleware can be bypassed using crafted Content-Type header. MIME types are case insensitive, but isRequestedByFormElementRe only matches lower-case. As a result, attacker can bypass csrf middleware using upper-case form-like MIME type. This vulnerability is fixed in 4.5.8. |
| In Eclipse OpenJ9 versions up to 0.51, when used with OpenJDK version 8 a stack based buffer overflow can be caused by modifying a file on disk that is read when the JVM starts. |
| In Eclipse Jetty 7.2.2 to 9.4.38, 10.0.0.alpha0 to 10.0.1, and 11.0.0.alpha0 to 11.0.1, CPU usage can reach 100% upon receiving a large invalid TLS frame. |
| In Eclipse Jetty 9.4.6.v20170531 to 9.4.36.v20210114 (inclusive), 10.0.0, and 11.0.0 when Jetty handles a request containing multiple Accept headers with a large number of “quality” (i.e. q) parameters, the server may enter a denial of service (DoS) state due to high CPU usage processing those quality values, resulting in minutes of CPU time exhausted processing those quality values. |
| In NetX Duo component HTTP server functionality of Eclipse ThreadX NetX Duo before
version 6.4.3, an attacker can cause an integer underflow and a
subsequent denial of service by writing a very large file, by specially
crafted packets with Content-Length smaller than the data request size. A
possible workaround is to disable HTTP PUT support.
This issue follows an uncomplete fix in CVE-2025-0728. |
| In NetX HTTP server functionality of Eclipse ThreadX NetX Duo before
version 6.4.3, an attacker can cause an integer underflow and a
subsequent denial of service by writing a very large file, by specially
crafted packets with Content-Length in one packet smaller than the data
request size of the other packet. A possible workaround is to disable
HTTP PUT support.
This issue follows an incomplete fix of CVE-2025-0727 |
| An integer underflow during deserialization may allow any unauthenticated user to read out of bounds heap memory. This may result into secret data or pointers revealing the layout of the address space to be included into a deserialized data structure, which may potentially lead to thread crashes or cause denial of service conditions. |
| In NetX HTTP server functionality of Eclipse ThreadX NetX Duo before
version 6.4.2, an attacker can cause an integer underflow and a
subsequent denial of service by writing a very large file, by specially
crafted packets with Content-Length smaller than the data request size. A
possible workaround is to disable HTTP PUT support. |
| In NetX HTTP server functionality of Eclipse ThreadX NetX Duo before
version 6.4.2, an attacker can cause an integer underflow and a
subsequent denial of service by writing a very large file, by specially
crafted packets with Content-Length in one packet smaller than the data
request size of the other packet. A possible workaround is to disable
HTTP PUT support. |
| In NetX HTTP server functionality of Eclipse ThreadX NetX Duo before
version 6.4.2, an attacker can cause a denial of service by specially
crafted packets. The core issue is missing closing of a file in case of
an error condition, resulting in the 404 error for each further file
request. Users can work-around the issue by disabling the PUT request
support. |
| In NetX HTTP server functionality of Eclipse ThreadX NetX Duo before
version 6.4.3, an attacker can cause a denial of service by specially
crafted packets. The core issue is missing closing of a file in case of
an error condition, resulting in the 404 error for each further file
request. Users can work-around the issue by disabling the PUT request
support.
This issue follows an incomplete fix of CVE-2025-0726. |
| In Eclipse Jetty versions 9.4.0 to 9.4.56 a buffer can be incorrectly released when confronted with a gzip error when inflating a request
body. This can result in corrupted and/or inadvertent sharing of data between requests. |
| In Eclipse Jetty versions 12.0.0 to 12.0.16 included, an HTTP/2 client can specify a very large value for the HTTP/2 settings parameter SETTINGS_MAX_HEADER_LIST_SIZE.
The Jetty HTTP/2 server does not perform validation on this setting, and tries to allocate a ByteBuffer of the specified capacity to encode HTTP responses, likely resulting in OutOfMemoryError being thrown, or even the JVM process exiting. |