It was discovered that GD incorrectly handled memory when processing certain images. A remote attacker could use this issue with a specially crafted image file to cause GD to crash, resulting in a denial of service, or possibly execute arbitrary code.
{ "availability": "No subscription required", "binaries": [ { "libgd2-xpm-dev": "2.1.0-3ubuntu0.11", "libgd-dev": "2.1.0-3ubuntu0.11", "libgd3-dbgsym": "2.1.0-3ubuntu0.11", "libgd3": "2.1.0-3ubuntu0.11", "libgd-dbg": "2.1.0-3ubuntu0.11", "libgd2-noxpm-dev": "2.1.0-3ubuntu0.11", "libgd-tools": "2.1.0-3ubuntu0.11", "libgd-tools-dbgsym": "2.1.0-3ubuntu0.11" } ] }
{ "availability": "No subscription required", "binaries": [ { "libgd-dev": "2.1.1-4ubuntu0.16.04.11", "libgd3-dbgsym": "2.1.1-4ubuntu0.16.04.11", "libgd3": "2.1.1-4ubuntu0.16.04.11", "libgd-dbg": "2.1.1-4ubuntu0.16.04.11", "libgd-dev-dbgsym": "2.1.1-4ubuntu0.16.04.11", "libgd-tools": "2.1.1-4ubuntu0.16.04.11", "libgd-tools-dbgsym": "2.1.1-4ubuntu0.16.04.11" } ] }