The Asterisk Development Team reports:
It is possible for a user of the Asterisk Manager Interface to bypass a security check and execute shell commands when they should not have that ability. Sending the "Async" header with the "Application" header during an Originate action, allows authenticated manager users to execute shell commands. Only users with the "system" privilege should be able to do this.
On systems that have the Asterisk Manager Interface, Skinny, SIP over TCP, or the built in HTTP server enabled, it is possible for an attacker to open as many connections to asterisk as he wishes. This will cause Asterisk to run out of available file descriptors and stop processing any new calls. Additionally, disk space can be exhausted as Asterisk logs failures to open new file descriptors.
Disclaimer: The data contained on this page is derived from the VuXML document, please refer to the the original document for copyright information. The author of portaudit makes no claim of authorship or ownership of any of the information contained herein.
If you have found a vulnerability in a FreeBSD port not listed in the database, please contact the FreeBSD Security Team. Refer to "FreeBSD Security Information" for more information.