Vulnerabilities (CVE)

Filtered by vendor Pyyaml Subscribe
Filtered by product Pyyaml
Total 4 CVE
CVE Vendors Products Updated CVSS v2 CVSS v3
CVE-2020-14343 2 Oracle, Pyyaml 2 Communications Cloud Native Core Network Function Cloud Native Environment, Pyyaml 2023-12-10 10.0 HIGH 9.8 CRITICAL
A vulnerability was discovered in the PyYAML library in versions before 5.4, where it is susceptible to arbitrary code execution when it processes untrusted YAML files through the full_load method or with the FullLoader loader. Applications that use the library to process untrusted input may be vulnerable to this flaw. This flaw allows an attacker to execute arbitrary code on the system by abusing the python/object/new constructor. This flaw is due to an incomplete fix for CVE-2020-1747.
CVE-2020-1747 4 Fedoraproject, Opensuse, Oracle and 1 more 4 Fedora, Leap, Communications Cloud Native Core Network Function Cloud Native Environment and 1 more 2023-12-10 10.0 HIGH 9.8 CRITICAL
A vulnerability was discovered in the PyYAML library in versions before 5.3.1, where it is susceptible to arbitrary code execution when it processes untrusted YAML files through the full_load method or with the FullLoader loader. Applications that use the library to process untrusted input may be vulnerable to this flaw. An attacker could use this flaw to execute arbitrary code on the system by abusing the python/object/new constructor.
CVE-2019-20477 2 Fedoraproject, Pyyaml 2 Fedora, Pyyaml 2023-12-10 7.5 HIGH 9.8 CRITICAL
PyYAML 5.1 through 5.1.2 has insufficient restrictions on the load and load_all functions because of a class deserialization issue, e.g., Popen is a class in the subprocess module. NOTE: this issue exists because of an incomplete fix for CVE-2017-18342.
CVE-2017-18342 2 Fedoraproject, Pyyaml 2 Fedora, Pyyaml 2023-12-10 7.5 HIGH 9.8 CRITICAL
In PyYAML before 5.1, the yaml.load() API could execute arbitrary code if used with untrusted data. The load() function has been deprecated in version 5.1 and the 'UnsafeLoader' has been introduced for backward compatibility with the function.