CVE-2022-36179
Fusiondirectory 1.3 suffers from Improper Session Handling.
CVSS
9.8
Critical
EPSS
0.9%
p57
KEV
—
Exploit Today
17
0-100
Published: Nov 22, 2022 · Last modified: Jul 9, 2026 · CWE-613
0.9%EPSS · 30 days1.1%
2026-06-302026-07-16
Fusiondirectory 1.3 suffers from Improper Session Handling.
- lists.debian.orghttps://lists.debian.org/debian-lts-announce/2023/07/msg00009.html
- yoroi.companyhttps://yoroi.company/research/cve-advisory-full-disclosure-multiple-vulnerabilities/
- lists.debian.orghttps://lists.debian.org/debian-lts-announce/2023/07/msg00009.html
- yoroi.companyhttps://yoroi.company/research/cve-advisory-full-disclosure-multiple-vulnerabilities/
CVECVSSEPSSKEVRExploitTitleMod.
CVE-2022-255906.5 MED66.7%
——20SurveyKing v0.2.0 was discovered to retain users' session cookies after logout, allowing attackers to login to the system and access data using the browser cache when the user exits the application.8dCVE-2022-415425.4 MED45.3%
——14devhub 0.102.0 was discovered to contain a broken session control.8dCVE-2026-443837.5 HIG43.0%
——13Multiple connections to the backend using the same charging station ID
are allowed, which could allow an attacker to deploy multiple instances
of malicious OCPP clients to overwhelm the backend.3dCVE-2022-346245.9 MED40.3%
——12Mealie1.0.0beta3 does not terminate download tokens after a user logs out, allowing attackers to perform a man-in-the-middle attack via a crafted GET request.8dCVE-2026-492298.3 HIG35.7%
——11Actual is a local-first personal finance app. Prior to 26.6.0, in OpenID multi-user mode, disabling a user only blocks future OpenID login for that identity, while existing Actual session tokens for the disabled user remain valid. The shared session validation path accepts any existing token row that has not expired without checking whether the associated user is still enabled, allowing a disabled user to continue calling authenticated server endpoints. This issue is fixed in version 26.6.0.8dCVE-2026-464559.8 CRI33.3%
——10Insufficient Session Expiration vulnerability in Apache Camel Keycloak Component.
The camel-keycloak security helper KeycloakSecurityHelper.parseAndVerifyAccessToken builds a Keycloak TokenVerifier using withChecks(...) with only the subject-exists check and the realm-URL (issuer) check. Keycloak's TokenVerifier.withChecks(...) appends to an initially empty check list - the upstream default checks are installed only when withDefaultChecks() is called - so the built-in IS_ACTIVE predicate, which validates the token's exp (expiration) and nbf (not-before) claims, is never applied. As a result the helper verifies the token signature, subject and issuer but does not enforce the token's validity window: an access token that is expired, or not yet valid, is accepted as valid. Routes that rely on this helper to authenticate inbound requests therefore accept access tokens that are outside their intended lifetime.
This issue affects Apache Camel: from 4.18.0 before 4.18.3, from 4.19.0 before 4.21.0.
Users are recommended to upgrade to version 4.21.0, which fixes the issue. If users are on the 4.18.x releases stream, then they are suggested to upgrade to 4.18.3. The fix makes KeycloakSecurityHelper.parseAndVerifyAccessToken include the TokenVerifier.IS_ACTIVE check so that expired or not-yet-valid access tokens are rejected, aligning the helper with Keycloak's default check set. For deployments that cannot upgrade immediately, enforce token expiration outside the helper - for example validate the access token's exp/nbf claims in the route before trusting it, keep Keycloak access-token lifetimes short, and ensure any upstream gateway or resource server also validates the token validity window.9d