GHSA-3v94-mw7p-v465

Suggest an improvement
Source
https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-3v94-mw7p-v465
Import Source
https://github.com/github/advisory-database/blob/main/advisories/github-reviewed/2026/05/GHSA-3v94-mw7p-v465/GHSA-3v94-mw7p-v465.json
JSON Data
https://api.osv.dev/v1/vulns/GHSA-3v94-mw7p-v465
Aliases
Related
Published
2026-05-07T02:59:20Z
Modified
2026-05-08T07:14:21.762869841Z
Severity
  • 8.7 (High) CVSS_V4 - CVSS:4.0/AV:N/AC:L/AT:N/PR:N/UI:N/VC:N/VI:N/VA:H/SC:N/SI:N/SA:N CVSS Calculator
Summary
hickory-proto: NSEC3 closest-encloser proof validation enters unbounded loop on cross-zone responses
Details

The NSEC3 closest-encloser proof validation in hickory-proto's (0.25.0-alpha.3 ... 0.25.2) and hickory-net's (0.26.0-alpha.1 .. 0.26.0) DnssecDnsHandle walks from the QNAME up to the SOA owner name, building a list of candidate encloser names. The iterator used assumes the QNAME is a descendant of the SOA owner, terminating only when the current candidate equals the SOA name. When the SOA in a response's authority section is not an ancestor of the QNAME, the loop stalls at the DNS root and never terminates, repeatedly calling Name::base_name() and pushing newly allocated Name and hashed-name entries into the candidate Vec.

The bug is reachable by any caller of DnssecDnsHandle, including the resolver, recursor, and client, when built with the dnssec-ring or dnssec-aws-lc-rs feature and configured to perform DNSSEC validation. It is triggered while validating a NoData or NXDomain response whose authority section contains an SOA record from a zone other than an ancestor of the QNAME, on a code path that requires NSEC3 closest-encloser proof. In practice this can be reached through an insecure CNAME chain that crosses zone boundaries into a DNSSEC-signed zone returning NoData, but the minimum condition is just a mismatched SOA owner on a response requiring NSEC3 validation.

A debug_assert_ne!(name, Name::root()) guards the loop body, so debug builds abort with a panic on the first iteration past the root. Release builds compile the assertion out and run the loop unbounded, allocating until the process exhausts available memory. A reachable upstream attacker who can return such a response can therefore crash a debug build or exhaust memory on a release build, for the affected configurations.

The affected code was migrated from hickory-proto to hickory-net as part of the 0.26.0 release. Hickory DNS recommends that all affected users update to hickory-net 0.26.1 for the fix.

Reporter

David Cook, ISRG

Database specific
{
    "cwe_ids": [
        "CWE-835"
    ],
    "github_reviewed": true,
    "github_reviewed_at": "2026-05-07T02:59:20Z",
    "severity": "HIGH",
    "nvd_published_at": null
}
References

Affected packages

crates.io / hickory-proto

Package

Name
hickory-proto
View open source insights on deps.dev
Purl
pkg:cargo/hickory-proto

Affected ranges

Type
SEMVER
Events
Introduced
0.25.0-alpha.3
Last affected
0.25.2

Database specific

source
"https://github.com/github/advisory-database/blob/main/advisories/github-reviewed/2026/05/GHSA-3v94-mw7p-v465/GHSA-3v94-mw7p-v465.json"

crates.io / hickory-net

Package

Affected ranges

Type
SEMVER
Events
Introduced
0.26.0-alpha.1
Fixed
0.26.1

Database specific

last_known_affected_version_range
"<= 0.26.0"
source
"https://github.com/github/advisory-database/blob/main/advisories/github-reviewed/2026/05/GHSA-3v94-mw7p-v465/GHSA-3v94-mw7p-v465.json"