GNU cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive. The archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe.
Security Fix(es):
cpio 2.11, when using the --no-absolute-filenames option, allows local users to write to arbitrary files via a symlink attack on a file in an archive.(CVE-2015-1197)
{
"severity": "Low"
}{
"noarch": [
"cpio-help-2.13-8.oe2203sp1.noarch.rpm"
],
"aarch64": [
"cpio-2.13-8.oe2203sp1.aarch64.rpm",
"cpio-debuginfo-2.13-8.oe2203sp1.aarch64.rpm",
"cpio-debugsource-2.13-8.oe2203sp1.aarch64.rpm"
],
"x86_64": [
"cpio-debuginfo-2.13-8.oe2203sp1.x86_64.rpm",
"cpio-2.13-8.oe2203sp1.x86_64.rpm",
"cpio-debugsource-2.13-8.oe2203sp1.x86_64.rpm"
],
"src": [
"cpio-2.13-8.oe2203sp1.src.rpm"
]
}