In Artifex Ghostscript through 9.25, the setpattern operator did not properly validate certain types. A specially crafted PostScript document could exploit this to crash Ghostscript or, possibly, execute arbitrary code in the context of the Ghostscript process. This is a type confusion issue because of failure to check whether the Implementation of a pattern dictionary was a structure type.
References
Link | Resource |
---|---|
http://git.ghostscript.com/?p=ghostpdl.git%3Ba=commitdiff%3Bh=693baf02152119af6e6afd30bb8ec76d14f84bbf | |
http://www.securityfocus.com/bid/106278 | Third Party Advisory VDB Entry |
https://access.redhat.com/errata/RHSA-2018:3834 | Third Party Advisory |
https://bugs.ghostscript.com/show_bug.cgi?id=700141 | Issue Tracking Permissions Required Third Party Advisory |
https://lists.debian.org/debian-lts-announce/2018/12/msg00019.html | Third Party Advisory |
https://semmle.com/news/semmle-discovers-severe-vulnerability-ghostscript-postscript-pdf | Exploit Third Party Advisory |
https://www.ghostscript.com/doc/9.26/News.htm | Release Notes |
Configurations
Configuration 1 (hide)
|
Configuration 2 (hide)
|
Configuration 3 (hide)
|
History
No history.
Information
Published : 2018-12-20 23:29
Updated : 2024-02-04 20:03
NVD link : CVE-2018-19134
Mitre link : CVE-2018-19134
CVE.ORG link : CVE-2018-19134
JSON object : View
Products Affected
debian
- debian_linux
artifex
- ghostscript
redhat
- enterprise_linux_server_aus
- enterprise_linux_workstation
- enterprise_linux_server_eus
- enterprise_linux_server
- enterprise_linux_desktop
CWE
CWE-704
Incorrect Type Conversion or Cast