External control of file name or path In age
Description
rage vulnerable to malicious plugin names, recipients, or identities causing arbitrary binary execution A plugin name containing a path separator may allow an attacker to execute an arbitrary binary.
Such a plugin name can be provided to the rage CLI through an attacker-controlled recipient or identity string, or to the following age APIs when the plugin feature flag is enabled:
age::plugin::Identity::from_str (or equivalently str::parse::<age::plugin::Identity>())
age::plugin::Identity::default_for_plugin
age::plugin::IdentityPluginV1::new
age::plugin::Recipient::from_str (or equivalently str::parse::<age::plugin::Recipient>())
On UNIX systems, a directory matching age-plugin-* needs to exist in the working directory for the attack to succeed.
The binary is executed with a single flag, either --age-plugin=recipient-v1 or --age-plugin=identity-v1. The standard input includes the recipient or identity string, and the random file key (if encrypting) or the header of the file (if decrypting). The format is constrained by the age-plugin protocol.
An equivalent issue was fixed in the reference Go implementation of age, see advisory GHSA-32gq-x56h-299c.
Thanks to ⬡-49016 for reporting this issue.
Mitigation
Update Impact
Minimal update. May introduce new vulnerabilities or breaking changes.
Aliases
References