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Hostname spoofing via backslashes in URL

Moderate
rodneyrehm published GHSA-p6j9-7xhc-rhwp Feb 22, 2021

Package

npm urijs (npm)

Affected versions

< 1.19.6

Patched versions

1.19.6

Description

Impact

If using affected versions to determine a URL's hostname, the hostname can be spoofed by using a backslash (\) character as part of the scheme delimiter, e.g. scheme:/\hostname. If the hostname is used in security decisions, the decision may be incorrect.

Depending on library usage and attacker intent, impacts may include allow/block list bypasses, SSRF attacks, open redirects, or other undesired behavior.

Example URL: https:/\expected-example.com/path
Escaped string: https:/\\expected-example.com/path (JavaScript strings must escape backslash)

Affected versions incorrectly return no hostname. Patched versions correctly return expected-example.com. Patched versions match the behavior of other parsers which implement the WHATWG URL specification, including web browsers and Node's built-in URL class.

Patches

Version 1.19.6 is patched against all known payload variants.

References

https://github.com/medialize/URI.js/releases/tag/v1.19.6 (fix for this particular bypass)
https://github.com/medialize/URI.js/releases/tag/v1.19.4 (fix for related bypass)
https://github.com/medialize/URI.js/releases/tag/v1.19.3 (fix for related bypass)
PR #233 (initial fix for backslash handling)

For more information

If you have any questions or comments about this advisory, open an issue in https://github.com/medialize/URI.js

Reporter credit

Yaniv Nizry from the CxSCA AppSec team at Checkmarx

Severity

Moderate

CVE ID

CVE-2021-27516

Weaknesses

No CWEs

Credits