First published: Wed Jan 15 2014(Updated: )
Unspecified vulnerability in the MySQL Server component in Oracle MySQL 5.6.14 and earlier allows remote authenticated users to affect availability via unknown vectors related to InnoDB, a different vulnerability than CVE-2014-0431.
Credit: secalert_us@oracle.com
Affected Software | Affected Version | How to fix |
---|---|---|
MySQL | <=5.6.14 | |
MySQL | =5.6.0 | |
MySQL | =5.6.1 | |
MySQL | =5.6.2 | |
MySQL | =5.6.3 | |
MySQL | =5.6.4 | |
MySQL | =5.6.5 | |
MySQL | =5.6.6 | |
MySQL | =5.6.7 | |
MySQL | =5.6.8 | |
MySQL | =5.6.9 | |
MySQL | =5.6.10 | |
MySQL | =5.6.11 | |
MySQL | =5.6.12 | |
MySQL | =5.6.13 |
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CVE-2013-5881 has a severity rating that indicates it poses risks to the availability of affected MySQL servers.
To fix CVE-2013-5881, update your MySQL server to version 5.6.15 or later.
CVE-2013-5881 affects Oracle MySQL versions 5.6.14 and earlier.
Yes, CVE-2013-5881 can be exploited by remote authenticated users to affect server availability.
CVE-2013-5881 specifically affects the MySQL Server component related to InnoDB.