Name
yajl
Version
2.1.0
Type
library
Description
Yet Another JSON Library.
Licenses
ISC
PURL
-
CPE
cpe:2.3:*:yajl_project:yajl:2.1.0:*:*:*:*:*:*:*
Other Versions#
Patches#
#
Title
Author
Resolve
1
Fix for CVE-2017-16516
=?UTF-8?q?Daniel=20P=2E=20Berrang=C3=A9?= <berrange@redhat.com>
CVE-2017-16516
2
Patch #2
Ross Burton <ross.burton@arm.com>
CVE-2023-33460
3
cmake: Set minimum required version to 3.5 for CMake 4+
Alper Ak <alperyasinak1@gmail.com>
4
Fix CVE-2022-24795
=?UTF-8?q?Petr=20P=C3=ADsa=C5=99?= <ppisar@redhat.com>
CVE-2022-24795
Vulnerabilities#
Name
Analysis
Description
Patched
There's a memory leak in yajl 2.1.0 with use of yajl_tree_parse function. which will cause out-of-memory in server and cause crash.
Patched
yajl-ruby is a C binding to the YAJL JSON parsing and generation library. The 1.x branch and the 2.x branch of `yajl` contain an integer overflow which leads to subsequent heap memory corruption when dealing with large (~2GB) inputs. The reallocation logic at `yajl_buf.c#L64` may result in the `need` 32bit integer wrapping to 0 when `need` approaches a value of 0x80000000 (i.e. ~2GB of data), which results in a reallocation of buf->alloc into a small heap chunk. These integers are declared as `size_t` in the 2.x branch of `yajl`, which practically prevents the issue from triggering on 64bit platforms, however this does not preclude this issue triggering on 32bit builds on which `size_t` is a 32bit integer. Subsequent population of this under-allocated heap chunk is based on the original buffer size, leading to heap memory corruption. This vulnerability mostly impacts process availability. Maintainers believe exploitation for arbitrary code execution is unlikely. A patch is available and anticipated to be part of yajl-ruby version 1.4.2. As a workaround, avoid passing large inputs to YAJL.
Patched
In the yajl-ruby gem 1.3.0 for Ruby, when a crafted JSON file is supplied to Yajl::Parser.new.parse, the whole ruby process crashes with a SIGABRT in the yajl_string_decode function in yajl_encode.c. This results in the whole ruby process terminating and potentially a denial of service.