MGASA-2023-0032

Advisory lineage Upstream: 3 Downstream: 0
Published: 07 Feb 2023, 00:06
Last modified:16 Apr 2026, 04:22

Vulnerability Summary

Overall Risk (default)
minimal
0/100
CVSS Score
No data
EPSS Score
No data
KEV
Not listed
Ransomware
No reports
Public exploits
None found
Dark Web
Not detected

Timeline

07 Feb 2023, 00:06
Published
Vulnerability first disclosed
16 Apr 2026, 04:22
Last Modified
Vulnerability information updated

Description

Updated apache packages fix security vulnerability CVE-2022-37436: Apache HTTP Server: mod_proxy prior to 2.4.55 allows a backend to trigger HTTP response splitting. Prior to 2.4.55, a malicious backend can cause the response headers to be truncated early, resulting in some headers being incorporated into the response body. If the later headers have any security purpose, they will not be interpreted by the client. Credits: Dimas Fariski Setyawan Putra (@nyxsorcerer) CVE-2022-36760: Apache HTTP Server: mod_proxy_ajp Possible request smuggling. Inconsistent Interpretation of HTTP Requests ('HTTP Request Smuggling') vulnerability in mod_proxy_ajp of Apache HTTP Server allows an attacker to smuggle requests to the AJP server it forwards requests to. Credits: ZeddYu_Lu from Qi'anxin Research Institute of Legendsec at Qi'anxin Group CVE-2006-20001: mod_dav out of bounds read, or write of zero byte A carefully crafted If: request header can cause a memory read, or write of a single zero byte, in a pool (heap) memory location beyond the header value sent. This could cause the process to crash.

Affected Systems

  • mageiaapache

    < 2.4.55-1.mga8

References (3)