Insecure functionality In github.com/tektoncd/pipeline
Description
Tekton Pipeline: Git Resolver Unsanitized Revision Parameter Enables git Argument Injection Leading to RCE
Summary
The git resolver's revision parameter is passed directly as a positional argument to git fetch without any validation that it does not begin with a - character. Because git parses flags from mixed positional arguments, an attacker can inject arbitrary git fetch flags such as --upload-pack=<binary>. Combined with the validateRepoURL function explicitly permitting URLs that begin with / (local filesystem paths), a tenant who can submit ResolutionRequest objects can chain these two behaviors to execute an arbitrary binary on the resolver pod. The tekton-pipelines-resolvers ServiceAccount holds cluster-wide get/list/watch on all Secrets, so code execution on the resolver pod enables full cluster-wide secret exfiltration.
Details
Root Cause 1 — Unvalidated revision parameter passed to git fetch
pkg/resolution/resolver/git/repository.go:85:
// pkg/resolution/resolver/git/repository.go lines 84-96 // 'revision' is the raw user-supplied string from the ResolutionRequest param. // It is passed verbatim as a positional argument to git fetch: func (repo *repository) checkout(ctx context.Context, revision string) error { _, err := repo.execGit(ctx, "fetch", "origin", revision, "--depth=1") // When revision == "--upload-pack=/usr/bin/curl", git parses it as the // --upload-pack flag, not as a refspec — executing the binary locally. if err != nil {...
execGit invokes exec.CommandContext("git", ...) — no shell is used, so shell metacharacters cannot be injected. However, git itself parses flags from mixed positional arguments. When revision = "--upload-pack=/path/to/binary", git receives this as the flag --upload-pack=/path/to/binary, not as a refspec. PopulateDefaultParams (resolver.go:418–424) applies only a leading-slash strip and a containsDotDot check on the pathInRepo parameter; the revision parameter receives no validation at all.
Root Cause 2 — validateRepoURL explicitly permits local filesystem paths
pkg/resolution/resolver/git/resolver.go:154-158:
// validateRepoURL validates if the given URL is a valid git, http, https URL or // starting with a / (a local repository). func validateRepoURL(url string) bool { pattern := `^(/|[^@]+@[^:]+|(git|https?)://)` re := regexp.MustCompile(pattern) return re.MatchString(url) }
Any URL beginning with / passes validation and is used directly as the argument to git clone. This means a local filesystem path such as /tmp/some-repo is a valid resolver URL.
Exploit Chain
--upload-pack=<binary> causes git to execute the specified binary as the upload-pack server when communicating with the remote. For local-path remotes (/path), git invokes the binary on the resolver pod itself with the repository path as its sole argument. Because the argument is passed via exec.Command as a single --upload-pack=<binary> string (not split by a shell), only binaries at known paths can be invoked — but several useful binaries exist in the resolver pod image (e.g., /bin/sh, /usr/bin/curl, /bin/cp).
Attack complexity is High because the exploit requires either:
A valid git repository at a known, predicable path on the resolver pod (e.g., /tmp/<reponame>-<suffix> from a concurrent resolution), or
A default-URL configuration pointing at a local path
PoC
# or use any pre-existing git repo path on the resolver pod) git init /tmp/localrepo && cd /tmp/localrepo && git commit --allow-empty -m "init" # Step 2: Craft a ResolutionRequest with injected --upload-pack flag kubectl create -f - <<'EOF' apiVersion: resolution.tekton.dev/v1beta1 kind: ResolutionRequest metadata:...
Verified: git fetch origin --upload-pack=/tmp/test-exec.sh --depth=1 executes test-exec.sh on the local machine even when origin is a local filesystem path. Exit code 0 was observed with the test binary executed successfully.
Impact
Code execution on the resolver pod when an attacker can stage or predict a valid git repository path in /tmp on the resolver pod.
Full cluster-wide Secret exfiltration: The tekton-pipelines-resolvers ServiceAccount is bound to a ClusterRole that grants get/list/watch on all Secrets in all namespaces (config/resolvers/200-clusterrole.yaml). Code execution on the resolver pod is therefore equivalent to reading every Secret in the cluster.
Privilege escalation: Secrets typically include kubeconfig files, cloud provider credentials, and API tokens — reading them enables lateral movement to cloud infrastructure.
Both the deprecated resolver (pkg/resolution/resolver/git/) and the current resolver (pkg/remoteresolution/resolver/git/) share the same validateRepoURL, PopulateDefaultParams, and checkout implementation via the shared git package. Both are affected.
Recommended Fix
Fix 1 — Validate that revision does not begin with - in PopulateDefaultParams:
if strings.HasPrefix(paramsMap[RevisionParam], "-") { return nil, fmt.Errorf("invalid revision %q: must not begin with '-'", paramsMap[RevisionParam]) }
Fix 2 — Restrict validateRepoURL to remote URLs only (remove local-path support in production builds, or add an explicit admin opt-in feature flag):
func validateRepoURL(url string) bool { pattern := `^([^@]+@[^:]+|(git|https?)://)` re := regexp.MustCompile(pattern) return re.MatchString(url) }
Applying Fix 1 alone is sufficient to prevent the argument injection. Fix 2 eliminates the enabling condition (local-path remotes for which --upload-pack runs locally) and reduces attack surface further.
Mitigation
Update Impact
Minimal update. May introduce new vulnerabilities or breaking changes.
Ecosystem | Package | Affected version | Patched versions |
|---|---|---|---|
go | 1.11.1, 1.9.3, 1.6.2, 1.3.4, 1.0.2 |
Aliases
References