Vulnerability Monitor

The vendors, products, and vulnerabilities you care about
389_directory_server Vendor: fedoraproject

About This Product

389_directory_server is a software product offered by fedoraproject. This product serves as critical infrastructure in many organizational deployments, making vulnerability monitoring essential for organizations relying on it. Security vulnerabilities in products of this category can affect system availability, data confidentiality, and integrity across entire networks. The moderate vulnerability count reflects ongoing security research and responsible disclosure practices. Regular assessment of known vulnerabilities and timely patching are fundamental components of responsible system administration for any deployment of this software.

Vulnerability Landscape Summary

SecUtils has identified 39 known vulnerabilities affecting fedoraproject 389_directory_server. This includes 1 critical-severity issue and 13 high-severity issues that warrant immediate attention. Vulnerabilities in this product have been disclosed spanning from 2011 to 2020, indicating a sustained research interest and ongoing security attention. 18 medium-severity issues and 7 low-severity issues complete the vulnerability landscape. Organizations should prioritize patching based on deployment context, asset criticality, and exploitation likelihood rather than severity alone.

Known Vulnerabilities
ID Date Published Last Modified Severity (CVSSv3) Severity (CVSSv2) Exploit Available
CVE-2010-4746 2011-02-23 2025-04-11 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2011-0019 2011-02-23 2025-04-11 - 7.5 Likely
CVE-2011-0022 2011-02-23 2025-04-11 - 4.7 Unknown
CVE-2011-0532 2011-02-23 2025-04-11 - 6.2 Unknown
CVE-2011-1067 2011-02-23 2025-04-11 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2012-0833 2012-07-03 2025-04-11 - 2.3 Unknown
CVE-2012-2678 2012-07-03 2025-04-11 - 1.2 Unknown
CVE-2012-2746 2012-07-03 2025-04-11 - 2.1 Unknown
CVE-2012-4450 2012-10-01 2025-04-11 - 6.0 Unknown
CVE-2013-0312 2013-03-13 2025-04-11 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2013-1897 2013-05-13 2025-04-11 - 2.6 Unknown
CVE-2013-2219 2013-07-31 2025-04-11 - 4.0 Likely
CVE-2013-4283 2013-09-10 2025-04-11 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2013-4485 2013-11-23 2025-04-11 - 4.0 Likely
CVE-2014-0132 2014-03-18 2025-04-12 - 6.5 Likely
CVE-2014-3562 2014-08-21 2025-04-12 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2014-8105 2015-03-10 2025-04-12 - 5.0 Likely
CVE-2014-8112 2015-03-10 2025-04-12 - 4.0 Likely
CVE-2015-3230 2015-10-29 2025-04-12 - 7.5 Likely
CVE-2016-0741 2016-04-19 2025-04-12 7.5 7.8 Likely
CVE-2017-7551 2017-08-16 2025-04-20 9.8 5.0 Likely
CVE-2015-1854 2017-09-19 2025-04-20 7.5 5.0 Likely
CVE-2017-15135 2018-01-24 2024-11-21 8.1 4.3 Likely
CVE-2017-15134 2018-03-01 2024-11-21 7.5 5.0 Likely
CVE-2018-1054 2018-03-07 2024-11-21 7.5 5.0 Likely
CVE-2017-2591 2018-04-30 2024-11-21 3.7 5.0 Likely
CVE-2011-0704 2018-05-04 2024-11-21 5.9 4.3 Likely
CVE-2018-1089 2018-05-09 2024-11-21 7.5 5.0 Likely
CVE-2018-10850 2018-06-13 2024-11-21 5.9 7.1 Likely
CVE-2017-2668 2018-06-22 2024-11-21 6.5 4.3 Likely
CVE-2018-10871 2018-07-18 2024-11-21 3.8 4.0 Likely
CVE-2018-14624 2018-09-06 2024-11-21 7.5 5.0 Likely
CVE-2018-14638 2018-09-14 2024-11-21 7.5 5.0 Likely
CVE-2018-14648 2018-09-28 2024-11-21 7.5 7.8 Likely
CVE-2019-3883 2019-04-17 2024-11-21 7.5 5.0 Likely
CVE-2019-10171 2019-08-02 2024-11-21 7.5 7.8 Likely
CVE-2019-14824 2019-11-08 2024-11-21 6.5 3.5 Unknown
CVE-2019-10224 2019-11-25 2024-11-21 4.6 2.1 Unknown
CVE-2010-3282 2020-01-09 2024-11-21 3.3 1.9 Unknown

How SecUtils Interprets Product Data

SecUtils normalizes and enriches National Vulnerability Database (NVD) records for fedoraproject 389_directory_server by standardizing vendor and product identifiers, aggregating vulnerability metadata from both NVD and MITRE sources, and structuring the data for rapid analysis and asset correlation. For every vulnerability listed, we extract Common Platform Enumeration (CPE) data, Common Weakness Enumeration (CWE) classifications, CVSS severity metrics, and reference information to enable organizations to prioritize patching and risk assessment efficiently. This record contains no exploit code, proof-of-concept instructions, or attack methodologies—only defensive intelligence necessary for vulnerability management and security operations.