Vulnerabilities (CVE)

Filtered by vendor Rxvt Subscribe
Filtered by product Rxvt
Total 7 CVE
CVE Vendors Products Updated CVSS v2 CVSS v3
CVE-2008-1142 7 Aterm, Eterm, Mrxvt and 4 more 7 Aterm, Eterm, Mrxvt and 4 more 2023-12-10 3.7 LOW N/A
rxvt 2.6.4 opens a terminal window on :0 if the DISPLAY environment variable is not set, which might allow local users to hijack X11 connections. NOTE: it was later reported that rxvt-unicode, mrxvt, aterm, multi-aterm, and wterm are also affected. NOTE: realistic attack scenarios require that the victim enters a command on the wrong machine.
CVE-2003-0022 1 Rxvt 1 Rxvt 2023-12-10 5.0 MEDIUM N/A
The "screen dump" feature in rxvt 2.7.8 allows attackers to overwrite arbitrary files via a certain character escape sequence when it is echoed to a user's terminal, e.g. when the user views a file containing the malicious sequence.
CVE-2000-0476 4 Michael Jennings, Putty, Rxvt and 1 more 4 Eterm, Putty, Rxvt and 1 more 2023-12-10 5.0 MEDIUM N/A
xterm, Eterm, and rxvt allow an attacker to cause a denial of service by embedding certain escape characters which force the window to be resized.
CVE-2001-1077 1 Rxvt 1 Rxvt 2023-12-10 4.6 MEDIUM N/A
Buffer overflow in tt_printf function of rxvt 2.6.2 allows local users to gain privileges via a long (1) -T or (2) -name argument.
CVE-2003-0023 1 Rxvt 1 Rxvt 2023-12-10 5.0 MEDIUM N/A
The menuBar feature in rxvt 2.7.8 allows attackers to modify menu options and execute arbitrary commands via a certain character escape sequence that inserts the commands into the menu.
CVE-1999-1186 3 Redhat, Rxvt, Slackware 3 Linux, Rxvt, Slackware Linux 2023-12-10 7.2 HIGH N/A
rxvt, when compiled with the PRINT_PIPE option in various Linux operating systems including Linux Slackware 3.0 and RedHat 2.1, allows local users to gain root privileges by specifying a malicious program using the -print-pipe command line parameter.
CVE-2003-0066 1 Rxvt 1 Rxvt 2023-12-10 7.5 HIGH N/A
The rxvt terminal emulator 2.7.8 and earlier allows attackers to modify the window title via a certain character escape sequence and then insert it back to the command line in the user's terminal, e.g. when the user views a file containing the malicious sequence, which could allow the attacker to execute arbitrary commands.