Filtered by vendor Grafana
Subscriptions
Filtered by product Grafana
Subscriptions
Total
121 CVE
| CVE | Vendors | Products | Updated | CVSS v3.1 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CVE-2026-28378 | 1 Grafana | 2 Grafana, Grafana Enterprise | 2026-07-13 | 3.1 Low |
| The public dashboard deletion endpoint does not enforce organization isolation, allowing an Org Admin in one organization to delete public dashboards belonging to a different organization by supplying the target dashboard's identifiers. | ||||
| CVE-2026-33382 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-07-13 | 7.5 High |
| Several Grafana API endpoints, some of them unauthenticated, do not limit the size of the request body before processing it. An attacker can send very large payloads that force excessive memory allocation, potentially exhausting memory and causing a denial of service. | ||||
| CVE-2026-8609 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-07-13 | 5.3 Medium |
| An unauthenticated attacker can repeatedly call Grafana's OAuth login route with unique values, causing unbounded memory growth that can eventually exhaust memory and crash the Grafana instance (denial of service). | ||||
| CVE-2026-8595 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-07-13 | 6.8 Medium |
| A user with Editor permissions can craft a dashboard whose table (TableNG) panel contains a malicious field name that executes as a script in the browser of any user who views the dashboard (stored cross-site scripting). | ||||
| CVE-2026-10601 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-07-12 | 5.4 Medium |
| A user with Viewer permissions can use specially crafted requests to the Tempo and Loki data source plugins to reach unintended backend endpoints. Depending on the backend configuration this can expose data source credentials, leak internal responses, or trigger administrative actions on the configured backend. | ||||
| CVE-2026-42129 | 1 Grafana | 2 Grafana, Loki Datasource | 2026-07-10 | 7.7 High |
| A user with Viewer permissions can use a path traversal in the Loki data source plugin to reach administrative Loki endpoints and read sensitive backend configuration and internal service information. | ||||
| CVE-2026-42127 | 1 Grafana | 2 Grafana, Grafana Enterprise | 2026-07-10 | 7.5 High |
| The public dashboard query endpoint does not limit request body size before processing, allowing unauthenticated attackers to trigger excessive memory allocation by sending arbitrarily large JSON payloads. This can lead to denial of service through memory exhaustion. No valid dashboard access token or authentication is required to exploit this vulnerability. | ||||
| CVE-2026-9029 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-07-10 | 7.3 High |
| A user with Editor permissions can place a malicious script in the attribution field of a Geomap panel's XYZ tile layer via a template variable. The script then executes in the browser of any user who views the affected dashboard (stored cross-site scripting). | ||||
| CVE-2026-33380 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-06-16 | 6.3 Medium |
| A vulnerability in SQL Expressions allows an authenticated attacker to read arbitrary files from the Grafana server's filesystem. Only instances with the sqlExpressions feature toggle enabled are vulnerable. | ||||
| CVE-2026-33381 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-06-16 | 5.9 Medium |
| When a user's access to mint tokens for a service account is revoked, it is sometimes still possible to do so for a few seconds after the event. The user will eventually lose access to do this. | ||||
| CVE-2026-28374 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-06-02 | 4.3 Medium |
| Editors could delete any annotation, even those they do not have read access to. The editor user cannot create or read the annotations. | ||||
| CVE-2026-28379 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-06-02 | 6.5 Medium |
| A race condition in Grafana Live allows authenticated users with Viewer role to trigger a server crash by sending concurrent requests that cause a fatal map access error. This results in complete service unavailability requiring restart of the Grafana server. | ||||
| CVE-2026-28380 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-06-02 | 6.5 Medium |
| Any Editor could delete any snapshot, even if they have no access to read or write them. | ||||
| CVE-2026-28383 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-06-02 | 6.5 Medium |
| A request to the Grafana plugin resources endpoint can cause unbounded memory allocation by reading the entire request body into memory. An authenticated user can exploit this to trigger an out-of-memory condition, potentially causing a denial of service. | ||||
| CVE-2026-33376 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-06-02 | 7.4 High |
| When using an IPv6 allow-list for the Auth Proxy feature, it defaults to /32 addresses. Addresses specifying a mask explicitly are not affected; to mitigate easily, add the desired mask (usually /128) to the addresses. Only auth proxy is affected; Okta, SAML, LDAP, etc are unaffected here. | ||||
| CVE-2026-33377 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-06-02 | 7.1 High |
| An Editor can overwrite a dashboard not owned by them to acquire admin on that specific dashboard. The user must have write access to the dashboard to escalate privilege. | ||||
| CVE-2026-33378 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-05-28 | 6.5 Medium |
| Using the $__timeGroup macro, one can achieve an OOM by overloading the server. This requires a SQL datasource. If the server is set up to auto-restart, the impact is minimal or non-existent, as the attack can take upwards of half an hour to crash the server. | ||||
| CVE-2026-28376 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-05-18 | 6.5 Medium |
| The Grafana Live push endpoint can be exploited to cause unbounded memory allocation by sending a large or streaming request body, potentially leading to out-of-memory conditions. An authenticated user with access to the Grafana Live API can trigger this issue. | ||||
| CVE-2026-27880 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-05-10 | 7.5 High |
| The OpenFeature feature toggle evaluation endpoint reads unbounded values into memory, which can cause out-of-memory crashes. | ||||
| CVE-2026-27877 | 1 Grafana | 1 Grafana | 2026-05-10 | 6.5 Medium |
| When using public dashboards and direct data-sources, all direct data-sources' passwords are exposed despite not being used in dashboards. No passwords of proxied data-sources are exposed. We encourage all direct data-sources to be converted to proxied data-sources as far as possible to improve your deployments' security. | ||||