Red Hat Integration Camel for Spring Boot -

CPE Details

Red Hat Integration Camel for Spring Boot -
-
2023-03-02
12h43 +00:00
2023-08-11
21h44 +00:00
Alerte pour un CPE
Stay informed of any changes for a specific CPE.
Notifications manage

CPE Name: cpe:2.3:a:redhat:integration_camel_for_spring_boot:-:*:*:*:*:*:*:*

Informations

Vendor

redhat

Product

integration_camel_for_spring_boot

Version

-

Related CVE

Open and find in CVE List

CVE ID Published Description Score Severity
CVE-2024-1635 2024-02-19 21h23 +00:00 A vulnerability was found in Undertow. This vulnerability impacts a server that supports the wildfly-http-client protocol. Whenever a malicious user opens and closes a connection with the HTTP port of the server and then closes the connection immediately, the server will end with both memory and open file limits exhausted at some point, depending on the amount of memory available. At HTTP upgrade to remoting, the WriteTimeoutStreamSinkConduit leaks connections if RemotingConnection is closed by Remoting ServerConnectionOpenListener. Because the remoting connection originates in Undertow as part of the HTTP upgrade, there is an external layer to the remoting connection. This connection is unaware of the outermost layer when closing the connection during the connection opening procedure. Hence, the Undertow WriteTimeoutStreamSinkConduit is not notified of the closed connection in this scenario. Because WriteTimeoutStreamSinkConduit creates a timeout task, the whole dependency tree leaks via that task, which is added to XNIO WorkerThread. So, the workerThread points to the Undertow conduit, which contains the connections and causes the leak.
7.5
High
CVE-2023-44487 2023-10-10 00h00 +00:00 The HTTP/2 protocol allows a denial of service (server resource consumption) because request cancellation can reset many streams quickly, as exploited in the wild in August through October 2023.
7.5
High
CVE-2022-4492 2023-02-23 00h00 +00:00 The undertow client is not checking the server identity presented by the server certificate in https connections. This is a compulsory step (at least it should be performed by default) in https and in http/2. I would add it to any TLS client protocol.
7.5
High