The Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND) is an implementation of the Domain Name System (DNS) protocols. BIND includes a DNS server (named); a resolver library (routines for applications to use when interfacing with DNS); and tools for verifying that the DNS server is operating correctly.
Security Fix(es):
- bind9: Parsing large DNS messages may cause excessive CPU load (CVE-2023-4408)
- bind9: Querying RFC 1918 reverse zones may cause an assertion failure when “nxdomain-redirect” is enabled (CVE-2023-5517)
- bind9: Enabling both DNS64 and serve-stale may cause an assertion failure during recursive resolution (CVE-2023-5679)
- bind9: Specific recursive query patterns may lead to an out-of-memory condition (CVE-2023-6516)
- bind9: KeyTrap - Extreme CPU consumption in DNSSEC validator (CVE-2023-50387)
- bind9: Preparing an NSEC3 closest encloser proof can exhaust CPU resources (CVE-2023-50868)
For more details about the security issue(s), including the impact, a CVSS score, acknowledgments, and other related information, refer to the CVE page(s) listed in the References section.