Know every vulnerabilitybefore it knows you.
DevGuard continuously monitors your dependencies and alerts you when CVEs like this one affect your stack — with real-time threat intelligence built for developers.
GHSA-r9pm-gxmw-wv6p
Summary
NodeVM supports excluding public network builtins from the wildcard builtin option. With this configuration direct access to http, https, http2, net, dgram, tls, dns, and dns/promises is blocked.
However, Node.js also exposes underscored internal HTTP builtins such as _http_client and _http_server. These are not blocked when the public modules are excluded.
Sandboxed code can use these internal builtins to make outbound HTTP requests and open listening HTTP sockets even though the public network modules are denied.
Note: This is not host RCE. It is a network capability bypass that can lead to SSRF-style access to internal services.
Details
The wildcard builtin expansion is based on Node.js builtin module names:
const BUILTIN_MODULES = (nmod.builtinModules || Object.getOwnPropertyNames(process.binding('natives')))
.filter(s=>!s.startsWith('internal/') && !DANGEROUS_BUILTINS.has(s));
Public modules can be excluded with -name:
if (builtins.indexOf(`-${name}`) === -1) {
addDefaultBuiltin(res, name, hostRequire);
}
But excluding http and net does not exclude internal siblings such as:
_http_client
_http_server
_tls_wrap
These internal modules expose network primitives.
Confirmed examples:
require('_http_client').ClientRequest(...)performs an outbound HTTP request to a host-local service whilehttpandnetare blocked.require('_http_server').Server(...).listen(...)opens a listening HTTP socket whilehttpandnetare blocked.
PoC
Tested on:
vm2: 3.11.2
Node.js: v25.9.0
Run from the vm2 repository root:
node poc/internal-http-builtin-network-bypass.js
internal-http-builtin-network-bypass.js
The PoC first confirms the intended restrictions work then bypasses them:
require("_http_client").ClientRequest(...)
This performs an HTTP request to a host-local service and reads the response.
It also confirms:
require("_http_server").Server(...).listen(0)
This opens a listening HTTP socket from inside the sandbox.
<img width="951" height="623" alt="Screenshot 2026-05-10 at 1 07 39 PM" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/21bfb1ff-dd15-423a-92c4-0337cd07816c" />Impact
An attacker who can run untrusted JavaScript inside NodeVM with this affected builtin configuration can regain network access even when the application attempted to block network modules.
This can allow SSRF-style access to localhost services, metadata endpoints, internal admin panels, or other network resources reachable from the host process.
Suggested fix
Treat underscored internal network modules as dangerous or link their availability to the public module they wrap.
At minimum, exclude related internal modules such as:
_http_agent
_http_client
_http_common
_http_incoming
_http_outgoing
_http_server
_tls_common
_tls_wrap
Alternatively, deny underscored Node.js internals from wildcard builtin expansion by default.
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 confidentiality of the information.
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.
Browse More
Continuously monitor your dependencies and get alerted when vulnerabilities like this one affect your stack.
Checkout DevGuard