First published: Wed Oct 17 2012(Updated: )
Unspecified vulnerability in the MySQL Server component in Oracle MySQL 5.1.65 and earlier, and 5.5.27 and earlier, allows remote authenticated users to affect availability via unknown vectors related to Server.
Credit: secalert_us@oracle.com
Affected Software | Affected Version | How to fix |
---|---|---|
MySQL | >=5.1.0<=5.1.65 | |
MySQL | >=5.5.0<=5.5.27 | |
Ubuntu | =10.04 | |
Ubuntu | =11.10 | |
Ubuntu | =12.04 | |
Ubuntu | =12.10 | |
Debian Linux | =6.0 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux | =6.0 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Desktop | =6.0 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server EUS | =6.3 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server | =6.0 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Workstation | =6.0 | |
MariaDB | >=5.1.0<5.1.66 | |
MariaDB | >=5.5.0<5.5.27 |
Sign up to SecAlerts for real-time vulnerability data matched to your software, aggregated from hundreds of sources.
CVE-2012-3177 has not been assigned a specific severity rating, but it allows remote authenticated users to affect the availability of the MySQL Server.
To fix CVE-2012-3177, upgrade MySQL Server to version 5.1.66 or later, or 5.5.28 or later.
CVE-2012-3177 affects MySQL versions 5.1.65 and earlier, and 5.5.27 and earlier.
CVE-2012-3177 impacts several operating systems including Ubuntu 10.04, 11.10, 12.04, 12.10, Debian 6.0, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0.
Yes, MariaDB versions before 5.1.66 and 5.5.27 are potentially affected by CVE-2012-3177.