Rack::Static determines whether a request should be served as a static file using a simple string prefix check. When configured with URL prefixes such as "/css", it matches any request path that begins with that string, including unrelated paths such as "/css-config.env" or "/css-backup.sql".
As a result, files under the static root whose names merely share the configured prefix may be served unintentionally, leading to information disclosure.
Rack::Static#route_file performs static-route matching using logic equivalent to:
@urls.any? { |url| path.index(url) == 0 }
This checks only whether the request path starts with the configured prefix string. It does not require a path segment boundary after the prefix.
For example, with:
use Rack::Static, urls: ["/css", "/js"], root: "public"
the following path is matched as intended:
/css/style.css
but these paths are also matched:
/css-config.env
/css-backup.sql
/csssecrets.yml
If such files exist under the configured static root, Rack forwards the request to the file server and serves them as static content.
This means a configuration intended to expose only directory trees such as /css/... and /js/... may also expose sibling files whose names begin with those same strings.
An attacker can request files under the configured static root whose names share a configured URL prefix and obtain their contents.
In affected deployments, this may expose configuration files, secrets, backups, environment files, or other unintended static content located under the same root directory.
prefix + "/".Rack::Static root directory.{
"nvd_published_at": "2026-04-02T17:16:24Z",
"severity": "HIGH",
"github_reviewed": true,
"cwe_ids": [
"CWE-187",
"CWE-200"
],
"github_reviewed_at": "2026-04-02T18:44:25Z"
}