{field}.isFilterable
access control can be bypassed in update
and delete
mutations by adding additional unique filters. These filters can be used as an oracle to probe the existence or value of otherwise unreadable fields.
Specifically, when a mutation includes a where
clause with multiple unique filters (e.g. id
and email
), Keystone will attempt to match records even if filtering by the latter fields would normally be rejected by field.isFilterable
or list.defaultIsFilterable
. This can allow malicious actors to infer the presence of a particular field value when a filter is successful in returning a result.
This affects any project relying on the default or dynamic isFilterable
behaviour (at the list or field level) to prevent external users from using the filtering of fields as a discovery mechanism. While this access control is respected during findMany
operations, it was not completely enforced during update
and delete
mutations when accepting more than one unique where
values in filters.
This has no impact on projects using isFilterable: false
or defaultIsFilterable: false
for sensitive fields, or if you have otherwise omitted filtering by these fields from your GraphQL schema. (See workarounds)
This issue has been patched in @keystone-6/core
version 6.5.0.
To mitigate this issue in older versions where patching is not a viable pathway.
isFilterable: false
statically for relevant fields to prevent filtering by them earlier in the access control pipeline (that is, don't use functions){field}.graphql.omit.read: true
for relevant fields, which implicitly removes filtering by these fields your GraphQL schemaupdate
and delete
operations for the relevant lists completely (e.g list({ access: { operation: { update: false, delete: false } }, ... })
){ "nvd_published_at": "2025-05-05T19:15:57Z", "cwe_ids": [ "CWE-200", "CWE-203" ], "severity": "LOW", "github_reviewed": true, "github_reviewed_at": "2025-05-05T18:51:34Z" }