All the vulnerabilities related to the version 1.2.0 of the package
Denial of Service in js-yaml
Versions of js-yaml
prior to 3.13.0 are vulnerable to Denial of Service. By parsing a carefully-crafted YAML file, the node process stalls and may exhaust system resources leading to a Denial of Service.
Upgrade to version 3.13.0.
Code Injection in js-yaml
Versions of js-yaml
prior to 3.13.1 are vulnerable to Code Injection. The load()
function may execute arbitrary code injected through a malicious YAML file. Objects that have toString
as key, JavaScript code as value and are used as explicit mapping keys allow attackers to execute the supplied code through the load()
function. The safeLoad()
function is unaffected.
An example payload is
{ toString: !<tag:yaml.org,2002:js/function> 'function (){return Date.now()}' } : 1
which returns the object
{
"1553107949161": 1
}
Upgrade to version 3.13.1.
Misinterpretation of malicious XML input
xmldom versions 0.6.0 and older do not correctly escape special characters when serializing elements removed from their ancestor. This may lead to unexpected syntactic changes during XML processing in some downstream applications.
Update to one of the fixed versions of @xmldom/xmldom
(>=0.7.0
)
See issue #271 for the status of publishing xmldom
to npm or join #270 for Q&A/discussion until it's resolved.
Downstream applications can validate the input and reject the maliciously crafted documents.
Similar to this one reported on the Go standard library:
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
xmldom/xmldom
npm owner ls @xmldom/xmldom
xmldom allows multiple root nodes in a DOM
xmldom parses XML that is not well-formed because it contains multiple top level elements, and adds all root nodes to the childNodes
collection of the Document
, without reporting any error or throwing.
This breaks the assumption that there is only a single root node in the tree, which led to https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2022-39299 and is a potential issue for dependents.
Update to @xmldom/xmldom@~0.7.7
, @xmldom/xmldom@~0.8.4
(dist-tag latest
) or @xmldom/xmldom@>=0.9.0-beta.4
(dist-tag next
).
One of the following approaches might help, depending on your use case:
documentElement
.childNode
.If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
Misinterpretation of malicious XML input
xmldom versions 0.4.0 and older do not correctly preserve system identifiers, FPIs or namespaces when repeatedly parsing and serializing maliciously crafted documents.
This may lead to unexpected syntactic changes during XML processing in some downstream applications.
Update to 0.5.0 (once it is released)
Downstream applications can validate the input and reject the maliciously crafted documents.
Similar to this one reported on the Go standard library:
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
xmldom/xmldom
npm owner ls xmldom