Quagga manages the TCP/IP based routing protocol. It takes a multi-server and multi-thread approach to resolve the current complexity of the Internet.
An information disclosure flaw was found in the way Quagga interprets RIP REQUEST packets. RIPd in Quagga will respond to RIP REQUEST packets for RIP versions that have been disabled or that have authentication enabled, allowing a remote attacker to acquire information about the local network. (CVE-2006-2223)
A route injection flaw was found in the way Quagga interprets RIPv1 RESPONSE packets when RIPv2 authentication is enabled. It is possible for a remote attacker to inject arbitrary route information into the RIPd routing tables. This issue does not affect Quagga configurations where only RIPv2 is specified. (CVE-2006-2224)
A denial of service flaw was found in Quagga's telnet interface. If an attacker is able to connect to the Quagga telnet interface, it is possible to cause Quagga to consume vast quantities of CPU resources by issuing a malformed 'sh' command. (CVE-2006-2276)
Users of Quagga should upgrade to these updated packages, which contain backported patches that correct these issues.