Affected versions of express-restify-mongoose
are susceptible to an information leakage vulnerability which may allow an attacker to access fields on a model even if those fields are marked as private.
Proof of Concept
If you have a user model that you want to protect, such as the following User model:
const User = mongoose.model('User', new mongoose.Schema({
name: String,
password: String,
}));
You would normally do something such as:
restify.serve(router, User, {
private: ['password'], // Set the password part of User as private, so outside people can't read it
})
This would hide the password field from people that send your application a GET /User
and GET /User/some-user-id
request.
A malicious user can go to your application and send a request for GET /User?distinct=password
and get all the passwords for all the users in the database, despite the field being set to private. This could be used for other private data, if the malicious user knew what was set as private for specific routes.
Recommendation
Version 2.x: Update to version 2.5.0 or later.
Version 3.x: Update to version 3.1.0 or later.
References
Affected versions of
express-restify-mongoose
are susceptible to an information leakage vulnerability which may allow an attacker to access fields on a model even if those fields are marked as private.Proof of Concept
If you have a user model that you want to protect, such as the following User model:
You would normally do something such as:
This would hide the password field from people that send your application a
GET /User
andGET /User/some-user-id
request.A malicious user can go to your application and send a request for
GET /User?distinct=password
and get all the passwords for all the users in the database, despite the field being set to private. This could be used for other private data, if the malicious user knew what was set as private for specific routes.Recommendation
Version 2.x: Update to version 2.5.0 or later.
Version 3.x: Update to version 3.1.0 or later.
References