CVE | Published | Severity | Details | Exploitability | Impact | Vector |
CVE‑2023‑45283 | 2023‑11‑09 17:15:09 | HIGH (8) | The filepath package does not recognize paths with a \??\ prefix as special. On Windows, a path beginning with \??\ is a Root Local Device path equivalent to a path beginning with \\?\. Paths with a \??\ prefix may be used to access arbitrary locations on the system. For example, the path \??\c:\x is equivalent to the more common path c:\x. Before fix, Clean could convert a rooted path such as \a\..\??\b into the root local device path \??\b. Clean will now convert this to .\??\b. Similarly, Join(\, ??, b) could convert a seemingly innocent sequence of path elements into the root local device path \??\b. Join will now convert this to \.\??\b. In addition, with fix, IsAbs now correctly reports paths beginning with \??\ as absolute, and VolumeName correctly reports the \??\ prefix as a volume name. UPDATE: Go 1.20.11 and Go 1.21.4 inadvertently changed the definition of the volume name in Windows paths starting with \?, resulting in filepath.Clean(\?\c:) returning \?\c: rather than \?\c:\ (among other effects). The previous behavior has been restored. | 4 | 4 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2023‑39325 | 2023‑10‑11 22:15:10 | HIGH (8) | A malicious HTTP/2 client which rapidly creates requests and immediately resets them can cause excessive server resource consumption. While the total number of requests is bounded by the http2.Server.MaxConcurrentStreams setting, resetting an in-progress request allows the attacker to create a new request while the existing one is still executing. With the fix applied, HTTP/2 servers now bound the number of simultaneously executing handler goroutines to the stream concurrency limit (MaxConcurrentStreams). New requests arriving when at the limit (which can only happen after the client has reset an existing, in-flight request) will be queued until a handler exits. If the request queue grows too large, the server will terminate the connection. This issue is also fixed in golang.org/x/net/http2 for users manually configuring HTTP/2. The default stream concurrency limit is 250 streams (requests) per HTTP/2 connection. This value may be adjusted using the golang.org/x/net/http2 package; see the Server.MaxConcurrentStreams setting and the ConfigureServer function. | 4 | 4 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2023‑39323 | 2023‑10‑05 21:15:11 | HIGH (8) | Line directives ("//line") can be used to bypass the restrictions on "//go:cgo_" directives, allowing blocked linker and compiler flags to be passed during compilation. This can result in unexpected execution of arbitrary code when running "go build". The line directive requires the absolute path of the file in which the directive lives, which makes exploiting this issue significantly more complex. | 2 | 6 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2023‑24538 | 2023‑04‑06 16:15:08 | CRITICAL (10) | Templates do not properly consider backticks (`) as Javascript string delimiters, and do not escape them as expected. Backticks are used, since ES6, for JS template literals. If a template contains a Go template action within a Javascript template literal, the contents of the action can be used to terminate the literal, injecting arbitrary Javascript code into the Go template. As ES6 template literals are rather complex, and themselves can do string interpolation, the decision was made to simply disallow Go template actions from being used inside of them (e.g. "var a = {{.}}"), since there is no obviously safe way to allow this behavior. This takes the same approach as github.com/google/safehtml. With fix, Template.Parse returns an Error when it encounters templates like this, with an ErrorCode of value 12. This ErrorCode is currently unexported, but will be exported in the release of Go 1.21. Users who rely on the previous behavior can re-enable it using the GODEBUG flag jstmpllitinterp=1, with the caveat that backticks will now be escaped. This should be used with caution. | 4 | 6 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2022‑41723 | 2023‑02‑28 18:15:10 | HIGH (8) | A maliciously crafted HTTP/2 stream could cause excessive CPU consumption in the HPACK decoder, sufficient to cause a denial of service from a small number of small requests. | 4 | 4 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2022‑41722 | 2023‑02‑28 18:15:10 | HIGH (8) | A path traversal vulnerability exists in filepath.Clean on Windows. On Windows, the filepath.Clean function could transform an invalid path such as "a/../c:/b" into the valid path "c:\b". This transformation of a relative (if invalid) path into an absolute path could enable a directory traversal attack. After fix, the filepath.Clean function transforms this path into the relative (but still invalid) path ".\c:\b". | 4 | 4 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2022‑30629 | 2022‑08‑10 20:15:41 | LOW (3) | Non-random values for ticket_age_add in session tickets in crypto/tls before Go 1.17.11 and Go 1.18.3 allow an attacker that can observe TLS handshakes to correlate successive connections by comparing ticket ages during session resumption. | 2 | 1 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2022‑29804 | 2022‑08‑10 20:15:35 | HIGH (8) | Incorrect conversion of certain invalid paths to valid, absolute paths in Clean in path/filepath before Go 1.17.11 and Go 1.18.3 on Windows allows potential directory traversal attack. | 4 | 4 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2022‑2879 | 2022‑10‑14 15:15:18 | HIGH (8) | Reader.Read does not set a limit on the maximum size of file headers. A maliciously crafted archive could cause Read to allocate unbounded amounts of memory, potentially causing resource exhaustion or panics. After fix, Reader.Read limits the maximum size of header blocks to 1 MiB. | 4 | 4 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2021‑44716 | 2022‑01‑01 05:15:08 | HIGH (8) | net/http in Go before 1.16.12 and 1.17.x before 1.17.5 allows uncontrolled memory consumption in the header canonicalization cache via HTTP/2 requests. | 4 | 4 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2021‑33194 | 2021‑05‑26 15:15:08 | HIGH (8) | golang.org/x/net before v0.0.0-20210520170846-37e1c6afe023 allows attackers to cause a denial of service (infinite loop) via crafted ParseFragment input. | 4 | 4 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2021‑23772 | 2021‑12‑24 12:15:08 | HIGH (9) | This affects all versions of package github.com/kataras/iris; all versions of package github.com/kataras/iris/v12. The unsafe handling of file names during upload using UploadFormFiles method may enable attackers to write to arbitrary locations outside the designated target folder. | 3 | 6 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2019‑14809 | 2019‑08‑13 21:15:11 | HIGH (8) | net/url in Go before 1.11.13 and 1.12.x before 1.12.8 mishandles malformed hosts in URLs, leading to an authorization bypass in some applications. This is related to a Host field with a suffix appearing in neither Hostname() nor Port(), and is related to a non-numeric port number. For example, an attacker can compose a crafted javascript:// URL that results in a hostname of google.com. | 0 | 0 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2018‑16873 | 2018‑12‑14 14:29:00 | HIGH (8) | In Go before 1.10.6 and 1.11.x before 1.11.3, the "go get" command is vulnerable to remote code execution when executed with the -u flag and the import path of a malicious Go package, or a package that imports it directly or indirectly. Specifically, it is only vulnerable in GOPATH mode, but not in module mode (the distinction is documented at https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Module_aware_go_get). Using custom domains, it's possible to arrange things so that a Git repository is cloned to a folder named ".git" by using a vanity import path that ends with "/.git". If the Git repository root contains a "HEAD" file, a "config" file, an "objects" directory, a "refs" directory, with some work to ensure the proper ordering of operations, "go get -u" can be tricked into considering the parent directory as a repository root, and running Git commands on it. That will use the "config" file in the original Git repository root for its configuration, and if that config file contains malicious commands, they will execute on the system running "go get -u". | 2 | 6 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2017‑8932 | 2017‑07‑06 16:29:00 | MEDIUM (4) | A bug in the standard library ScalarMult implementation of curve P-256 for amd64 architectures in Go before 1.7.6 and 1.8.x before 1.8.2 causes incorrect results to be generated for specific input points. An adaptive attack can be mounted to progressively extract the scalar input to ScalarMult by submitting crafted points and observing failures to the derive correct output. This leads to a full key recovery attack against static ECDH, as used in popular JWT libraries. | 0 | 0 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2017‑15041 | 2017‑10‑05 21:29:00 | CRITICAL (10) | Go before 1.8.4 and 1.9.x before 1.9.1 allows "go get" remote command execution. Using custom domains, it is possible to arrange things so that example.com/pkg1 points to a Subversion repository but example.com/pkg1/pkg2 points to a Git repository. If the Subversion repository includes a Git checkout in its pkg2 directory and some other work is done to ensure the proper ordering of operations, "go get" can be tricked into reusing this Git checkout for the fetch of code from pkg2. If the Subversion repository's Git checkout has malicious commands in .git/hooks/, they will execute on the system running "go get." | 4 | 6 | NETWORK |
CVE‑2012‑2666 | 2021‑07‑09 11:15:08 | CRITICAL (10) | golang/go in 1.0.2 fixes all.bash on shared machines. dotest() in src/pkg/debug/gosym/pclntab_test.go creates a temporary file with predicable name and executes it as shell script. | 4 | 6 | NETWORK |
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2024‑10‑30 | 0.12.8.195 | Mac update refinements |
2024‑10‑25 | 0.12.3.190 | |
2024‑10‑21 | 0.12.0.187 | Macos implementaiton, linux and windows improvements |
2024‑10‑16 | 0.11.128.186 | Linux stats and system information improvements, improvements for application shutdown |
2024‑09‑12 | 0.11.113.171 | CPU Optimizations and Packages reliability improvements |
2024‑09‑05 | 0.11.106.164 | Phased deployment enhancements |
2024‑09‑04 | 0.11.103.161 | |
2024‑09‑02 | 0.11.102.160 | CPU Optimizations and Packages reliability improvements |
2024‑08‑30 | 0.11.99.157 | CPU Optimizations and Packages reliability improvements |
2024‑08‑29 | 0.11.98.156 | CPU utilization and console event optimization |
2024‑08‑28 | 0.11.97.155 | Reliability to detect unusual updates like redistributables. |
2024‑08‑27 | 0.11.96.154 | |
2024‑08‑26 | 0.11.95.153 | Faster response for reboot requests |
2024‑08‑20 | 0.11.92.150 | Additional package upgrade pre-requisites |
2024‑08‑15 | 0.11.89.147 | |
2024‑08‑06 | 0.11.87.145 | |
2024‑07‑26 | 0.11.83.141 | Add resiliency for MAC duplicates and uptime |
2024‑07‑25 | 0.11.82.140 | Changes to facilitate cross-platform use. Bitlocker and Windows key refinements |
2024‑07‑15 | 0.11.80.138 | Antivirus and temperature added to configuration checks |
2024‑07‑15 | 0.11.79.137 | Add configuration checks for execution policy and secure boot |
2024‑07‑11 | 0.11.77.135 | load balancing refinements |
2024‑07‑10 | 0.11.76.134 | Add additional load balancing and data residency capabilities, add randomness to recurring task timings to decrease server load |
2024‑07‑05 | 0.11.74.132 | changes to graph and residual work on user imporsonation |
2024‑07‑04 | 0.11.73.131 | Add configuration checks for execution policy and secure boot. |
2024‑07‑03 | 0.11.72.130 | Enhanced event log monitoring |
2024‑07‑02 | 0.11.71.129 | Add details to Windows updates, enhanced risk metrics for application patches |
2024‑06‑19 | 0.11.65.123 | Update resiliancy and garbage collection |
2024‑06‑13 | 0.11.60.118 | Enhanced logging |
2024‑06‑12 | 0.11.55.113 | Include the primary drive serial number; MAC addresses for built-in wireless, Bluetooth, and ethernet into the device hash to restore uninstalled and reinstalled devices in cases where the motherboard serial is not unique |
2024‑06‑07 | 0.11.54.112 | Patch and package uninstall data addition |
2024‑06‑05 | 0.11.47.105 | refine per-user registry application listing |
2024‑06‑02 | 0.11.45.103 | uninstall and reinstall refinements, refine local logging, refine self-update and uninstall timing |
2024‑05‑30 | 0.11.21.79 | various bug fixes and improvements |
2024‑05‑28 | 0.11.16.74 | Error logging, registration, and uninstall improvements. |
2024‑05‑24 | 0.11.14.72 | applied changes for devices and login commands, changes for registration as well |
2024‑05‑22 | 0.11.13.71 | Add Windows computer model, improve Operating System parsing |
2024‑05‑21 | 0.11.11.69 | Added additional states for Windows update, flexibility for non-standard program file configurations, support for network diagrams at the switch level, details for Windows editions |
2024‑05‑21 | 0.11.10.68 | Add specific cases for Defender patterns and Composer versions. |
2024‑05‑17 | 0.11.3.61 | Change Log storage location to c:\program files\Lavawall |
2024‑05‑17 | 0.11.1.59 | self-update improvements. |
2024‑05‑16 | 0.8.0.55 | error log reporting and management. |
2024‑05‑15 | 0.7.0.54 | Websocket resiliency improvements |
2024‑05‑09 | 0.6.0.53 | Error log reporting and management. |
2024‑05‑01 | 0.5.44.52 | Even more improvements to scheduler |
2024‑04‑24 | 0.5.41.49 | Install compatibility with Sandbox |
2024‑04‑22 | 0.5.21.29 | Project property changes to enable automated compilation with new features. |
2024‑04‑20 | 0.5.20.28 | Add motherboard serial number and company reassignment |
2024‑04‑11 | 0.5.4.12 | Automate release notes as part of build process |
2024‑04‑03 | 0.5.3.11 | Websocket and service enhancements |
2024‑03‑21 | 0.5.2.10 | Enhance zip file validation |
2024‑05‑20 | 253 | Added cleanup of old .json files during a re-install |
2024‑05‑13 | 252 | Added apt-get update to install |
2024‑05‑06 | 248 | Allow restart to use /var/run/reboot-required if needrestart is not installed |
2024‑04‑22 | 239 | Improve internal update and version tracking |
2024‑04‑15 | 235 | Add support for Yum packages |
2024‑04‑08 | 233 | Align patching with Windows patch reporting |
2024‑04‑02 | 228 | Add support for needrestart |
2024‑03‑04 | 224 | Schedule restarts |
2024‑03‑25 | 221 | Add support for apt packages |
2024‑03‑18 | 212 | Implement release management |
2024‑03‑11 | 202 | Add user login monitoring |
2024‑03‑04 | 189 | Enhance installation reliability |
2024‑02‑26 | 187 | Exapand triggers to identify if the instance needs to be restarted |
2024‑02‑19 | 146 | Improve compatibility for non-AWS instances |
2024‑02‑14 | 138 | Add self-uninstall capabilities |
2024‑02‑12 | 135 | Enhance scheduling flexibility |
2024‑02‑07 | 132 | Add kernel version tracking |
2024‑02‑05 | 124 | Add device hash to cryptographic self-update script validation |
2024‑01‑29 | 107 | Enhance encryption of patch data |
2024‑01‑22 | 98 | Improve how available storage is calculated |
2024‑01‑15 | 97 | Move initial tasks from installation file to sub scripts |
2024‑05‑21 | 91 | Improve multi-distribution compatibility |
2024‑05‑21 | 79 | Improve encryption reliability |
2023‑12‑11 | 68 | Enhance cryptographic validation of new scripts before updating |
2023‑11‑20 | 62 | Add inner layer of AES encryption in case TLS inspection doesn't allow for a secure connection |
2023‑11‑27 | 56 | Additional base cases for resiliancy |
2023‑11‑20 | 54 | Additional headers added to authentication process during installation. |
2023‑11‑20 | 53 | Enhanced key management |
2023‑11‑15 | 51 | Add insecure installation parameter to allow installation in environments with TLS inspection or other machine-in-the-middle situations. |
2023‑11‑06 | 42 | Enhance redundant encryption during installation. |
2023‑10‑30 | 33 | Improve install-over compatibility |
2023‑10‑23 | 18 | Add reboot configuration and scheduling |
2023‑10‑23 | 17 | Add self-updating functionality. |
2023‑10‑16 | 15 | Add Linux patching information for apt |
2023‑10‑09 | 14 | Collect system information |
2023‑10‑09 | 13 | Add Linux distribution information |
2023‑09‑30 | 12 | Add memory monitoring |
2023‑09‑30 | 10 | Add hardware information |
2023‑09‑23 | 9 | Add AWS information |
2023‑09‑23 | 8 | Add customized schedule capability for configuration updates |
2023‑09‑23 | 7 | Add support for package monitoring using package and dpkg logs |
2023‑09‑16 | 6 | Add storage data configuration gathering |
2023‑09‑16 | 5 | Add CPU information |
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