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Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2025-0781
Disclosure Date: January 28, 2025 (last updated January 29, 2025)
An attacker can bypass the sandboxing of Nasal scripts and arbitrarily write to any file path that the user has permission to modify at the operating-system level.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-13709
Disclosure Date: August 27, 2017 (last updated November 26, 2024)
In FlightGear before version 2017.3.1, Main/logger.cxx in the FGLogger subsystem allows one to overwrite any file via a resource that affects the contents of the global Property Tree.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2017-8921
Disclosure Date: May 12, 2017 (last updated November 26, 2024)
In FlightGear before 2017.2.1, the FGCommand interface allows overwriting any file the user has write access to, but not with arbitrary data: only with the contents of a FlightGear flightplan (XML). A resource such as a malicious third-party aircraft could exploit this to damage files belonging to the user. Both this issue and CVE-2016-9956 are directory traversal vulnerabilities in Autopilot/route_mgr.cxx - this one exists because of an incomplete fix for CVE-2016-9956.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2016-9956
Disclosure Date: February 22, 2017 (last updated November 08, 2023)
The route manager in FlightGear before 2016.4.4 allows remote attackers to write to arbitrary files via a crafted Nasal script.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2012-2090
Disclosure Date: June 17, 2012 (last updated October 04, 2023)
Multiple format string vulnerabilities in FlightGear 2.6 and earlier and SimGear 2.6 and earlier allow user-assisted remote attackers to cause a denial of service and possibly execute arbitrary code via format string specifiers in certain data chunk values in an aircraft xml model to (1) fgfs/flightgear/src/Cockpit/panel.cxx or (2) fgfs/flightgear/src/Network/generic.cxx, or (3) a scene graph model to simgear/simgear/scene/model/SGText.cxx.
0
Attacker Value
Unknown
CVE-2012-2091
Disclosure Date: June 17, 2012 (last updated October 04, 2023)
Multiple buffer overflows in FlightGear 2.6 and earlier and SimGear 2.6 and earlier allow user-assisted remote attackers to cause a denial of service (crash) and possibly execute arbitrary code via a (1) long string in a rotor tag of an aircraft xml model to the Rotor::getValueforFGSet function in src/FDM/YASim/Rotor.cpp or (2) a crafted UDP packet to the SGSocketUDP::read function in simgear/simgear/simgear/io/sg_socket_udp.cxx.
0