Impact
This impacts users that use shescape to escape arguments:
- for the Unix shell Bash, or any not-officially-supported Unix shell;
- using the
escape
or escapeAll
functions with the interpolation
option set to true
.
An attacker can cause polynomial backtracking in terms of the input string length due to a Regular Expression in shescape that is vulnerable to Regular Expression Denial of Service (ReDoS). Example:
import * as shescape from "shescape";
/* 1. Prerequisites */
const options = {
interpolation: true,
// and
shell: "/bin/bash",
// or
shell: "some-not-officially-supported-shell",
// or
shell: undefined, // Only if the system's default shell is bash or an unsupported shell.
};
/* 2. Attack */
let userInput = '{,'.repeat(150_000); // polynomial backtracking
/* 3. Usage */
shescape.escape(userInput, options);
// or
shescape.escapeAll([userInput], options);
Patches
This bug has been patched in v1.6.1 which you can upgrade to now. No further changes required.
Workarounds
Alternatively, a maximum length can be enforced on input strings to shescape to reduce the impact of the vulnerability. It is not recommended to try and detect vulnerable input strings, as the logic for this may end up being vulnerable to ReDoS itself.
References
For more information
Impact
This impacts users that use shescape to escape arguments:
escape
orescapeAll
functions with theinterpolation
option set totrue
.An attacker can cause polynomial backtracking in terms of the input string length due to a Regular Expression in shescape that is vulnerable to Regular Expression Denial of Service (ReDoS). Example:
Patches
This bug has been patched in v1.6.1 which you can upgrade to now. No further changes required.
Workarounds
Alternatively, a maximum length can be enforced on input strings to shescape to reduce the impact of the vulnerability. It is not recommended to try and detect vulnerable input strings, as the logic for this may end up being vulnerable to ReDoS itself.
References
For more information