Version 3.11.0 of @nuxt/vite-builder, a Vite bundler for Nuxt, brings several updates compared to the previous stable version, 3.10.3. Key dependency upgrades include h3 (from 1.10.2 to 1.11.1), ufo (from 1.4.0 to 1.5.1), vite (from 5.1.4 to 5.1.6), cssnano (from 6.0.3 to 6.1.0), esbuild (from 0.20.1 to 0.20.2), unplugin (from 1.7.1 to 1.10.0), @nuxt/kit (from 3.10.3 to 3.11.0), and magic-string (from 0.30.7 to 0.30.8).
These updates likely incorporate bug fixes, performance improvements, and new features within those respective packages, potentially leading to a more stable and efficient build process. While most dev dependencies remain the same, the core Nuxt kit has been updated. Developers should especially note the vite and @nuxt/kit upgrades as they may introduce breaking changes or new configuration options requiring code adjustments.
The updated unplugin version might provide enhanced plugin compatibility or new plugin-related functionalities. Furthermore, the updated cssnano and esbuild versions indicate a focus on optimizing CSS and JavaScript builds, potentially resulting in smaller bundle sizes and faster loading times for Nuxt applications. The upgrade of the h3 dependency (a lightweight HTTP framework), can influence server-side rendering performance. Overall, this new release includes a variety of smaller dependency bumps, focused on improvements and bug fixes.
Finally the newer version includes an updated version of core Nuxt packages (like @nuxt/kit and @nuxt/schema), developers upgrading should ensure they are up to date on the changes present in these packages.
All the vulnerabilities related to the version 3.11.0 of the package
Opening a malicious website while running a Nuxt dev server could allow read-only access to code
Nuxt allows any websites to send any requests to the development server and read the response due to default CORS settings.
While Vite patched the default CORS settings to fix https://github.com/vitejs/vite/security/advisories/GHSA-vg6x-rcgg-rjx6, nuxt uses its own CORS handler by default (https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt/pull/23995).
https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt/blob/7d345c71462d90187fd09c96c7692f306c90def5/packages/vite/src/client.ts#L257-L263
That CORS handler sets Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
.
[!IMPORTANT]
If on an affected version, it may be possible to opt-out of the default Nuxt CORS handler by configuringvite.server.cors
.
nuxt dev
.http://localhost:3000/_nuxt/app.vue
(fetch('http://localhost:3000/_nuxt/app.vue')
) from a different origin page.Users with the default server.cors option using Vite builder may get the source code stolen by malicious websites
/__nuxt_vite_node__/manifest
/ /__nuxt_vite_node__/module
also seems to have Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
, so it maybe also possible to exploit that handler.
https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt/blob/7d345c71462d90187fd09c96c7692f306c90def5/packages/vite/src/vite-node.ts#L39
Although I didn't find a valid module id.
Note that this handler is probably also vulnerable to DNS rebinding attacks as I didn't find any host header checks.
esbuild enables any website to send any requests to the development server and read the response
esbuild allows any websites to send any request to the development server and read the response due to default CORS settings.
esbuild sets Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
header to all requests, including the SSE connection, which allows any websites to send any request to the development server and read the response.
https://github.com/evanw/esbuild/blob/df815ac27b84f8b34374c9182a93c94718f8a630/pkg/api/serve_other.go#L121 https://github.com/evanw/esbuild/blob/df815ac27b84f8b34374c9182a93c94718f8a630/pkg/api/serve_other.go#L363
Attack scenario:
http://malicious.example.com
).fetch('http://127.0.0.1:8000/main.js')
request by JS in that malicious web page. This request is normally blocked by same-origin policy, but that's not the case for the reasons above.http://127.0.0.1:8000/main.js
.In this scenario, I assumed that the attacker knows the URL of the bundle output file name. But the attacker can also get that information by
/index.html
: normally you have a script tag here/assets
: it's common to have a assets
directory when you have JS files and CSS files in a different directory and the directory listing feature tells the attacker the list of files/esbuild
SSE endpoint: the SSE endpoint sends the URL path of the changed files when the file is changed (new EventSource('/esbuild').addEventListener('change', e => console.log(e.type, e.data))
)The scenario above fetches the compiled content, but if the victim has the source map option enabled, the attacker can also get the non-compiled content by fetching the source map file.
npm i
npm run watch
fetch('http://127.0.0.1:8000/app.js').then(r => r.text()).then(content => console.log(content))
in a different website's dev tools.Users using the serve feature may get the source code stolen by malicious websites.