First published: Wed Apr 17 2013(Updated: )
Unspecified vulnerability in Oracle MySQL 5.1.67 and earlier, 5.5.29 and earlier, and 5.6.10 and earlier allows remote authenticated users to affect availability via unknown vectors related to Server Locking.
Credit: secalert_us@oracle.com
Affected Software | Affected Version | How to fix |
---|---|---|
Oracle MySQL | >=5.1.0<=5.1.67 | |
Oracle MySQL | >=5.5.0<=5.5.29 | |
Oracle MySQL | >=5.6.0<=5.6.10 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Desktop | =6.0 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server EUS | =6.4 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server | =6.0 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server | =6.4 | |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Workstation | =6.0 | |
MariaDB | >=5.5.0<5.5.30 | |
MariaDB | >=10.0.0<10.0.2 |
Sign up to SecAlerts for real-time vulnerability data matched to your software, aggregated from hundreds of sources.
The severity of CVE-2013-1506 is classified as moderate due to its potential impact on availability.
To fix CVE-2013-1506, upgrade to a fixed version of Oracle MySQL that is beyond 5.1.67, 5.5.29, or 5.6.10.
CVE-2013-1506 affects Oracle MySQL versions 5.1.67 and earlier, 5.5.29 and earlier, and 5.6.10 and earlier.
CVE-2013-1506 can be exploited by remote authenticated users to affect the availability of the MySQL server.
There are no specific workarounds for CVE-2013-1506; upgrading to a secure version is recommended.