| CVE |
Vendors |
Products |
Updated |
CVSS v3.1 |
| BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 8.1 SP4 and earlier, 7.0 SP6 and earlier, and 6.1 SP7 and earlier sometimes stores the boot password in the registry in cleartext, which might allow local users to gain administrative privileges. |
| BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 8.1 SP4 and earlier and 7.0 SP6 and earlier, when using the weblogic.Deployer command with the t3 protocol, does not use the secure t3s protocol even when an Administration port is enabled on the Administration server, which might allow remote attackers to sniff the connection. |
| BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 8.1 SP4 and earlier, and 7.0 SP5 and earlier, do not encrypt multicast traffic, which might allow remote attackers to read sensitive cluster synchronization messages by sniffing the multicast traffic. |
| BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 8.1 SP5 and earlier, and 7.0 SP6 and earlier, when using username/password authentication, does not lock out a username after the maximum number of invalid login attempts, which makes it easier for remote attackers to guess the password. |
| BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 9.0, 8.1 through SP5, and 7.0 through SP6 allows anonymous binds to the embedded LDAP server, which allows remote attackers to read user entries or cause a denial of service (unspecified) via a large number of connections. |
| Multiple unspecified vulnerabilities in BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 8.1 through SP4, 7.0 through SP6, and 6.1 through SP7 allow remote attackers to access MBean attributes or cause an unspecified denial of service via unknown attack vectors. |
| Unspecified vulnerability in BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 8.1 SP5 allows untrusted applications to obtain the server's SSL identity via unknown attack vectors. |
| BEA WebLogic Server 6.1 SP7 and earlier allows remote attackers to read arbitrary files via unknown attack vectors related to a "default internal servlet" accessed through HTTP. |
| BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 8.1 SP4 and earlier, 7.0 SP6 and earlier, and WebLogic Server 6.1 SP7 and earlier allow remote attackers to cause a denial of service (memory exhaustion) via crafted non-canonicalized XML documents. |
| BEA WebLogic Express and WebLogic Server 7.0 and 7.0.0.1, stores passwords in plaintext when a keystore is used to store a private key or trust certificate authorities, which allows local users to gain access. |
| BEA WebLogic Server 8.1 before Service Pack 4 and 7.0 before Service Pack 6, may send sensitive data over non-secure channels when using JTA transactions, which allows remote attackers to read potentially sensitive network traffic. |
| stopWebLogic.sh in BEA WebLogic Server 8.1 before Service Pack 4 and 7.0 before Service Pack 6 displays the administrator password to stdout when executed, which allows local users to obtain the password by viewing a local display. |
| BEA WebLogic Server 8.1 up to SP4, 7.0 up to SP6, and 6.1 up to SP7 displays the internal IP address of the WebLogic server in the WebLogic Server Administration Console, which allows remote authenticated administrators to determine the address. |
| The WebLogic Server Administration Console in BEA WebLogic Server 8.1 up to SP4 and 7.0 up to SP6 displays the domain name in the Console login form, which allows remote attackers to obtain sensitive information. |
| Unspecified vulnerability in the WebLogic Server Administration Console for BEA WebLogic Server 9.0 prevents the console from setting custom JDBC security policies correctly, which could allow attackers to bypass intended policies. |
| Unspecified vulnerability in BEA WebLogic Server 9.1 and 9.0, 8.1 through SP5, 7.0 through SP6, and 6.1 through SP7 allows untrusted applications to obtain private server keys. |
| BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express version 8.1 up to SP2, 7.0 up to SP4, and 6.1 up to SP6 may store the database username and password for an untargeted JDBC connection pool in plaintext in config.xml, which allows local users to gain privileges. |
| BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 7.0 through Service Pack 5 does not log out users when an application is redeployed, which allows those users to continue to access the application without having to log in again, which may be in violation of newly changed security constraints or role mappings. |
| BEA Systems WebLogic 8.1 SP1 allows remote attackers to poison the web cache, bypass web application firewall protection, and conduct XSS attacks via an HTTP request with both a "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" header and a Content-Length header, which causes WebLogic to incorrectly handle and forward the body of the request in a way that causes the receiving server to process it as a separate HTTP request, aka "HTTP Request Smuggling." |
| Multiple cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities in BEA WebLogic Server and WebLogic Express 9.0, 8.1 SP4 and earlier, 7.0 SP6 and earlier, and 6.1 SP7 and earlier allow remote attackers to inject arbitrary web script or HTML and gain administrative privileges via unknown attack vectors. |