Fuzz testing, by Ada Logics and sponsored by the CNCF, identified input to functions in the strvals package that can cause a stack overflow. In Go, a stack overflow cannot be recovered from. Applications that use functions from the strvals package in the Helm SDK can have a Denial of Service attack when they use this package and it panics.
The strvals package contains a parser that turns strings into Go structures. For example, the Helm client has command line flags like --set
, --set-string
, and others that enable the user to pass in strings that are merged into the values. The strvals package converts these strings into structures Go can work with. Some string inputs can cause array data structures to be created causing a stack overflow.
Applications that use the strvals package in the Helm SDK to parse user supplied input can suffer a Denial of Service when that input causes a panic that cannot be recovered from.
The Helm Client will panic with input to --set
, --set-string
, and other value setting flags that causes a stack overflow. Helm is not a long running service so the panic will not affect future uses of the Helm client.
This issue has been resolved in 3.10.3.
SDK users can validate strings supplied by users won't create large arrays causing significant memory usage before passing them to the strvals functions.
Helm's security policy is spelled out in detail in our SECURITY document.
Disclosed by Ada Logics in a fuzzing audit sponsored by CNCF.
{ "nvd_published_at": "2022-12-15T19:15:00Z", "github_reviewed_at": "2022-12-14T21:36:56Z", "severity": "MODERATE", "github_reviewed": true, "cwe_ids": [ "CWE-400" ] }