| From the Red Hat advisory:
Tavis Ormandy found that QEMU did not perform adequate sanity-checking of
data received via the "net socket listen" option. A malicious local
administrator of a guest domain could trigger this flaw to potentially
execute arbitrary code outside of the domain. (CVE-2007-5730)
Markus Armbruster discovered that the hypervisor's para-virtualized
framebuffer (PVFB) backend failed to validate the frontend's framebuffer
description. This could allow a malicious user to cause a denial of
service, or to use a specially crafted frontend to compromise the
privileged domain (Dom0). (CVE-2008-1943)
Daniel P. Berrange discovered that the hypervisor's para-virtualized
framebuffer (PVFB) backend failed to validate the format of messages
serving to update the contents of the framebuffer. This could allow a
malicious user to cause a denial of service, or compromise the privileged
domain (Dom0). (CVE-2008-1944)
Chris Wright discovered a security vulnerability in the QEMU block format
auto-detection, when running fully-virtualized guests. Such
fully-virtualized guests, with a raw formatted disk image, were able
to write a header to that disk image describing another format. This could
allow such guests to read arbitrary files in their hypervisor's host.
(CVE-2008-2004)
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