Several API endpoints in authenticated mode have no authentication at all. They respond to completely unauthenticated requests with sensitive data or allow state-changing operations. No account, no session, no API key needed.
Verified against the latest version.
Discord: sagi03581
GET /api/heartbeat-runs/:runId/issues returns issue data for a heartbeat run with zero authentication. Every other endpoint in server/src/routes/activity.ts calls assertCompanyAccess, but this one was missed.
curl -s http://<target>:3100/api/heartbeat-runs/00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000001/issues
# -> [] (HTTP 200, not 401 or 403)
If an attacker obtains a valid run UUID (from logs, error messages, shared URLs, or by probing), they can read issue data without any credentials.
POST /api/cli-auth/challenges creates a CLI authentication challenge with no actor check at all. The handler at server/src/routes/access.ts:1638-1659 skips any auth verification.
curl -s -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"command":"test"}' \
http://<target>:3100/api/cli-auth/challenges
# returns challenge ID, token, and a pre-generated board API key
The response includes a boardApiToken that becomes active once the challenge is approved. Combined with open registration (separate report), this enables persistent API key generation.
These endpoints in server/src/routes/access.ts require no authentication:
curl -s http://<target>:3100/api/skills/index
# returns all available skill endpoints
curl -s http://<target>:3100/api/skills/paperclip
# returns the FULL agent heartbeat procedure including:
# - every API endpoint and its parameters
# - authentication mechanism (env var names, header formats)
# - the complete agent coordination protocol
# - the agent creation/hiring workflow
curl -s http://<target>:3100/api/skills/paperclip-create-agent
# returns the full agent creation workflow with adapter configs
This hands an attacker a complete map of the internal API without authenticating. It also leaks how agents authenticate, how heartbeats work, and what adapter configurations are available.
GET /api/health returns deployment mode, exposure setting, auth status, bootstrap status, version, and feature flags.
curl -s http://<target>:3100/api/health
# {
# "deploymentMode": "authenticated",
# "deploymentExposure": "public",
# "authReady": true,
# "bootstrapStatus": "ready",
# "version": "2026.403.0",
# ...
# }
Tells an attacker exactly how the instance is configured, whether registration is available, and what version is running.
Add authentication to heartbeat run issues in server/src/routes/activity.ts:
GET /api/heartbeat-runs/:runId/issues -- add assertCompanyAccess like every other endpoint in the same fileAdd authentication to CLI challenge creation in server/src/routes/access.ts:
POST /api/cli-auth/challenges -- add assertBoard at minimumAdd authentication to skill endpoints in server/src/routes/access.ts:
GET /api/skills/availableGET /api/skills/indexGET /api/skills/:skillNameReduce health endpoint information -- consider removing deploymentMode, deploymentExposure, and version from the unauthenticated response, or gating the full response behind assertBoard
Consider a global auth rejection middleware for all /api/* routes in authenticated mode. Currently unauthenticated requests get actor: { type: "none" } and pass through to next(), relying on each route handler to check individually. A missing check means an open endpoint. Rejecting type: "none" at the middleware level for all routes except an explicit public allowlist (health, sign-in, sign-up, webhooks) would prevent this class of bug entirely.
Discord: sagi03581
Happy to help verify fixes or provide additional details.
{
"github_reviewed": true,
"github_reviewed_at": "2026-04-16T22:47:05Z",
"cwe_ids": [
"CWE-306"
],
"severity": "HIGH",
"nvd_published_at": null
}