Portainer enforces seven EndpointSecuritySettings restrictions that administrators configure to restrict the container configurations non-admin users can launch: privileged mode, host PID namespace, device mapping, capabilities, sysctls, security-opt (Seccomp / AppArmor), and bind mounts.
The vulnerability is exposed when a non-admin Portainer user (Standard User role, or any role granted endpoint-level access) has been given access to a Docker Swarm endpoint via Portainer RBAC. Admins and users without Swarm endpoint access are not affected.
These restrictions are enforced on the standard container creation path, but several of them are not applied on the Docker Swarm service API:
POST /services/create — 1 of 7 checks applied. CapabilityAdd, CapabilityDrop, Sysctls, and Privileges (Seccomp / AppArmor) are not parsed from the request body and are forwarded to the Docker daemon without validation.POST /services/{id}/update — 0 of 7 checks applied. The route dispatches to the generic restrictedResourceOperation, which validates RBAC ownership but does not inspect the request body or call fetchEndpointSecuritySettings().The EndpointSecuritySettings checks apply when the administrator has configured any of AllowContainerCapabilitiesForRegularUsers, AllowSysctlSettingForRegularUsers, AllowSecurityOptForRegularUsers, or AllowBindMountsForRegularUsers to restrict standard users.
A regular user with access to a Docker Swarm endpoint can:
CapabilityAdd: ["SYS_ADMIN", "NET_ADMIN", "SYS_PTRACE", …] or Privileges.Seccomp.Mode: "unconfined".CapabilityAdd: ["ALL"] plus a bind mount of /, scale to one replica, and access the host filesystem from the running container (e.g. via chroot /host).In addition, the partial Mounts[] struct used by the bind-mount check inspects only the top-level Type field. A mount with Type: "volume" and VolumeOptions.DriverConfig.Options: {type: "none", o: "bind", device: "<host path>"} is forwarded to the Docker daemon unchanged; the local volume driver then materialises it as a bind-equivalent mount, bypassing AllowBindMountsForRegularUsers. The same field path is accepted by the standalone POST /volumes/create endpoint, which never had any AllowBindMountsForRegularUsers check on any branch.
This undermines the administrator's configured security policy on Swarm-enabled endpoints.
The vulnerability exists in every Portainer release with Docker Swarm support — the service-creation path has never checked CapabilityAdd, CapabilityDrop, Sysctls, or Privileges, and the service-update path has never performed any EndpointSecuritySettings validation. The VolumeOptions.DriverConfig field has never been parsed by the partial service struct on any branch, so the volume-driver-bind variant (service create/update and direct /volumes/create) shares the same affected range.
Fixes are included in the next release of each supported branch:
| Branch | First vulnerable | Fixed in | |---------------------|------------------|------------| | 2.33.x (LTS) | 2.33.0 | 2.33.8 | | 2.39.x (LTS) | 2.39.0 | 2.39.2 | | 2.40.x (STS) | 2.40.0 | 2.41.0 |
Portainer LTS branches receive fixes for 6 months plus a 3-month overlap after the next LTS ships. STS releases are supported only until the next STS ships — the 2.40.x STS line ends with the 2.41.0 release. All releases prior to 2.33.0 are end-of-life and will not receive a fix; users on EOL versions should upgrade to a supported LTS branch.
Administrators who cannot immediately upgrade can reduce exposure with the following measures. None of these replaces the fix.
type: none / o: bind on untrusted endpoints via a daemon-side allowlist. This closes the volume-driver-bind variant until the patched release is deployed.Mounts inspected (1/7)// api/http/proxy/factory/docker/services.go (pre-fix)
type PartialService struct {
TaskTemplate struct {
ContainerSpec struct {
Mounts []struct {
Type string
}
}
}
}
CapabilityAdd, CapabilityDrop, Sysctls, and Privileges are not declared in the struct, so json.Unmarshal does not include them in the validated view. The request body is then forwarded to the Docker daemon without those fields being checked.
// api/http/proxy/factory/docker/transport.go (pre-fix)
if match, _ := path.Match("/services/*/*", requestPath); match {
serviceID := path.Base(path.Dir(requestPath))
// ... no body inspection, no call to fetchEndpointSecuritySettings ...
return transport.restrictedResourceOperation(
request, serviceID, serviceID,
portainer.ServiceResourceControl, false,
)
}
fetchEndpointSecuritySettings() is called in three places in the codebase: container creation, service creation (bind-mount check only), and volume browsing. Service update is not among them.
// api/http/proxy/factory/docker/services.go (pre-fix — partial Mounts struct)
Mounts []struct {
Type string // only this field was read
}
Because VolumeOptions.DriverConfig.Options is not declared in the partial struct, a mount of Type: "volume" passes the Type != "bind" check and is forwarded to the daemon. The local volume driver treats {type: "none", o: "bind", device: "<host path>"} as a bind-equivalent mount, so the check is bypassed.
The fix extends the partial struct to carry VolumeOptions.DriverConfig.Options map[string]string, rejects service create/update requests where that map declares a bind-style driver, and adds a new CheckVolumeBodyRestrictions invocation on POST /volumes/create (which previously had no AllowBindMountsForRegularUsers check on any branch).
An authenticated, non-admin Portainer user with access to any Docker Swarm-enabled endpoint can configure a service with:
CAP_SYS_ADMIN, CAP_NET_ADMIN, CAP_SYS_PTRACE, or ALL — not restricted by AllowContainerCapabilitiesForRegularUsers.Privileges.Seccomp.Mode: "unconfined" — not restricted by AllowSecurityOptForRegularUsers.Privileges.AppArmor.Mode: "disabled" — not restricted by AllowSecurityOptForRegularUsers.AllowSysctlSettingForRegularUsers./, /var/run/docker.sock, SSH keys, or Portainer's own database — not restricted by AllowBindMountsForRegularUsers.Type: "volume" mount whose VolumeOptions.DriverConfig.Options describe a local-driver bind, or a direct POST /volumes/create with the same payload, yields the same capability as a direct bind and is not restricted by AllowBindMountsForRegularUsers.In combination (e.g. CapabilityAdd:["ALL"] + bind mount of /), this gives a user access equivalent to root on the Swarm manager host from a restricted account, overriding the administrator's security policy.
2026-03-12 — route2shell privately discloses the volume-driver local-bind variant.2026-04-05 — JohannesLks disclosure of the Swarm service create/update bypass2026-04-18 — Fix merged to develop.2026-04-29 — 2.41.0 released.2026-05-07 — 2.39.2-LTS and 2.33.8-LTS released.
route2shell — disclosure of the volume-driver local-bind variant on both Swarm service creation/update and the standalone /volumes/create endpoint.
{
"severity": "CRITICAL",
"cwe_ids": [
"CWE-862"
],
"github_reviewed": true,
"github_reviewed_at": "2026-05-14T16:33:42Z",
"nvd_published_at": null
}