In the test environment, it was confirmed that an authenticated regular user can specify another user’s cipher_id and call:
PUT /api/ciphers/{id}/partial
Even though the standard retrieval API correctly denies access to that cipher, the partial update endpoint returns 200 OK and exposes cipherDetails (including name, notes, data, secureNote, etc.).
put_cipher_partial retrieves the target Cipher but does not perform ownership or access control checks before returning to_json.
Authorization checks present in the normal update API are missing here.
src/api/core/ciphers.rs:717
let Some(cipher) = Cipher::find_by_uuid(&cipher_id, &conn).await else {
err!("Cipher doesn't exist")
};
if let Some(ref folder_id) = data.folder_id {
if Folder::find_by_uuid_and_user(folder_id, &headers.user.uuid, &conn).await.is_none() {
err!("Invalid folder", "Folder does not exist or belongs to another user");
}
}
// Move cipher
cipher.move_to_folder(data.folder_id.clone(), &headers.user.uuid, &conn).await?;
// Update favorite
cipher.set_favorite(Some(data.favorite), &headers.user.uuid, &conn).await?;
Ok(Json(cipher.to_json(&headers.host, &headers.user.uuid, None, CipherSyncType::User, &conn).await?))
By comparison, the standard update API includes an explicit authorization check: src/api/core/ciphers.rs:688
if !cipher.is_write_accessible_to_user(&headers.user.uuid, &conn).await {
err!("Cipher is not write accessible")
}
The to_json method does not abort processing when access restrictions are not met; instead, it proceeds to construct and return a detailed response.
src/db/models/cipher.rs:175
let (read_only, hide_passwords, _) = if sync_type == CipherSyncType::User {
match self.get_access_restrictions(user_uuid, cipher_sync_data, conn).await {
Some((ro, hp, mn)) => (ro, hp, mn),
None => {
error!("Cipher ownership assertion failure");
(true, true, false)
}
}
} else {
(false, false, false)
};
src/db/models/cipher.rs:335
let mut json_object = json!({
"object": "cipherDetails",
"id": self.uuid,
"type": self.atype,
...
"name": self.name,
"notes": self.notes,
"fields": fields_json,
"data": data_json,
...
});
cipher_id.cipher_id (preconditions).Baseline check: confirm that standard retrieval is denied. <img width="2014" height="855" alt="image" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/32b12cc9-3672-4a88-afd0-ef7715474662" />
Execute the vulnerable API. Confirm that 200 OK is returned and that cipherDetails includes fields such as id, name, notes, secureNote, etc.
<img width="2018" height="1113" alt="image" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/341b330c-8d55-4f06-a622-0d7da28f62fd" />
favorite or folder operations)./api/ciphers/<cipher_id>/partial includes attachments[].url.In filesystem (FS) deployments, this returns a tokenized endpoint such as:
/attachments/<cipher>/<file>?token=...
In object storage deployments, it returns a short-lived pre-signed URL.
As a result, an attacker can use these URLs to directly download attachment data that they are not authorized to access.
This can lead to disclosure of sensitive information stored in the Vault, including personal data and authentication credentials. Such exposure may further result in account compromise, lateral movement, and other secondary impacts.
{
"severity": "MODERATE",
"github_reviewed": true,
"nvd_published_at": null,
"cwe_ids": [
"CWE-639"
],
"github_reviewed_at": "2026-03-04T20:14:06Z"
}