GHSA-9q5m-jfc4-wc92

Suggest an improvement
Source
https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-9q5m-jfc4-wc92
Import Source
https://github.com/github/advisory-database/blob/main/advisories/github-reviewed/2026/04/GHSA-9q5m-jfc4-wc92/GHSA-9q5m-jfc4-wc92.json
JSON Data
https://api.osv.dev/v1/vulns/GHSA-9q5m-jfc4-wc92
Aliases
  • CVE-2026-33544
Published
2026-04-01T19:52:04Z
Modified
2026-04-01T20:01:23.089558Z
Severity
  • 7.7 (High) CVSS_V3 - CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:H/PR:L/UI:R/S:C/C:H/I:H/A:N CVSS Calculator
Summary
Tinyauth has OAuth account confusion via shared mutable state on singleton service instances
Details

Summary

All three OAuth service implementations (GenericOAuthService, GithubOAuthService, GoogleOAuthService) store PKCE verifiers and access tokens as mutable struct fields on singleton instances shared across all concurrent requests. When two users initiate OAuth login for the same provider concurrently, a race condition between VerifyCode() and Userinfo() causes one user to receive a session with the other user's identity.

Details

The OAuthBrokerService.GetService() returns a single shared instance per provider for every request. The OAuth flow stores intermediate state as struct fields on this singleton:

Token storagegeneric_oauth_service.go line 96:

generic.token = token  // Shared mutable field on singleton

Verifier storagegeneric_oauth_service.go line 81:

generic.verifier = verifier  // Shared mutable field on singleton

In the callback handler oauth_controller.go lines 136–143, the code calls:

err = service.VerifyCode(code)                       // line 136 — stores token on singleton
// ... race window ...
user, err := controller.broker.GetUser(req.Provider)  // line 143 — reads token from singleton

Between these two calls, a concurrent request's VerifyCode() can overwrite the token field, causing GetUser()Userinfo() to fetch the wrong user's identity claims.

The same pattern exists in all three implementations: - github_oauth_service.go lines 34–39, 77, 86–99 - google_oauth_service.go lines 22–27, 65, 73–87

PoC

Race scenario (two concurrent OAuth callbacks):

  1. User A and User B both click "Login with GitHub" on the same tinyauth instance
  2. Both are redirected to GitHub, authorize, and GitHub redirects both back with authorization codes
  3. Both callbacks arrive at tinyauth nearly simultaneously:
Timeline:
  t0: Request A → service.VerifyCode(codeA) → singleton.token = tokenA
  t1: Request B → service.VerifyCode(codeB) → singleton.token = tokenB  (overwrites tokenA)
  t2: Request A → broker.GetUser("github")  → Userinfo() reads singleton.token = tokenB
  t3: Request A receives User B's identity (email, name, groups)

User A now has a tinyauth session with User B's email, gaining access to all resources User B is authorized for via tinyauth's ACL.

PKCE verifier DoS variant: Even with PKCE, concurrent oauthURLHandler calls overwrite the verifier field, causing VerifyCode() to send the wrong verifier to the OAuth provider, which rejects the exchange.

Static verification: Run Go's race detector on a test that calls VerifyCode and Userinfo concurrently on the same service instance — the -race flag will flag data races on the token and verifier fields.

Go race detector confirmation: Running a concurrent test with go test -race on the singleton service detects 4 data races on the token and verifier fields. Without the race detector, measured token overwrite rate is 99.9% (9,985/10,000 iterations).

Test environment: tinyauth v5.0.4, commit 592b7ded, Go race detector + source code analysis

Impact

An attacker who times their OAuth callback to race with a victim's callback can obtain a tinyauth session with the victim's identity. This grants unauthorized access to all resources the victim is permitted to access through tinyauth's ACL system. The probability of collision increases with concurrent OAuth traffic.

The PKCE verifier overwrite additionally causes a denial-of-service: concurrent OAuth logins for the same provider reliably fail.

Suggested Fix

Pass verifier and token through method parameters or return values instead of storing them on the singleton:

func (generic *GenericOAuthService) VerifyCode(code string, verifier string) (*oauth2.Token, error) {
    return generic.config.Exchange(generic.context, code, oauth2.VerifierOption(verifier))
}

func (generic *GenericOAuthService) Userinfo(token *oauth2.Token) (config.Claims, error) {
    client := generic.config.Client(generic.context, token)
    // ...
}

Store the PKCE verifier in the session/cookie associated with the OAuth state parameter, not on the service struct.

Database specific
{
    "cwe_ids": [
        "CWE-362"
    ],
    "github_reviewed": true,
    "nvd_published_at": null,
    "severity": "HIGH",
    "github_reviewed_at": "2026-04-01T19:52:04Z"
}
References

Affected packages

Go / github.com/steveiliop56/tinyauth

Package

Name
github.com/steveiliop56/tinyauth
View open source insights on deps.dev
Purl
pkg:golang/github.com/steveiliop56/tinyauth

Affected ranges

Type
SEMVER
Events
Introduced
0Unknown introduced version / All previous versions are affected
Fixed
1.0.1-0.20260401140714-fc1d4f2082a5

Database specific

source
"https://github.com/github/advisory-database/blob/main/advisories/github-reviewed/2026/04/GHSA-9q5m-jfc4-wc92/GHSA-9q5m-jfc4-wc92.json"