The Deno sandbox may be unexpectedly weakened by allowing file read/write access to privileged files in various locations on Unix and Windows platforms. For example, reading /proc/self/environ
may provide access equivalent to --allow-env
, and writing /proc/self/mem
may provide access equivalent to --allow-all
.
Users who grant read and write access to the entire filesystem may not realize that these access to these files may have additional, unintended consequences. The documentation did not reflect that this practice should be undertaken to increase the strength of the security sandbox.
Users who run code with --allow-read
or --allow-write
may unexpectedly end up granting additional permissions via file-system operations.
Deno 1.43 and above require explicit --allow-all
access to read or write /etc
, /dev
on unix platform (as well as /proc
and /sys
on linux platforms), and any path starting with \\
on Windows.
The security sandbox in previous versions of Deno allows for denial of access to these files, but it requires an explicit addition of deny flags: --deny-read=/dev --deny-read=/sys --deny-read=/proc --deny-read=/etc --deny-write=/dev --deny-write=/sys --deny-write=/proc --deny-write=/etc
. Note that symlinks in allowed locations may defeat this protection in earlier versions of Deno.
This vulnerability was reported by a number of analysts. Thanks to oliver@secfault-security.com, finn@secfault-security.com, @leesh3288, and @cristianstaicu for their reports and analysis.
{ "nvd_published_at": "2024-05-07T21:15:09Z", "cwe_ids": [ "CWE-863" ], "severity": "HIGH", "github_reviewed": true, "github_reviewed_at": "2024-05-08T14:33:16Z" }