ui.restructured_text() renders reStructuredText server-side with Docutils without disabling file insertion directives.
When a NiceGUI application passes attacker-controlled content to ui.restructured_text(), an attacker can use standard Docutils directives (include, csv-table with :file:, raw with :file:) to read local files readable by the NiceGUI server process.
Applications that only pass trusted static strings to ui.restructured_text() are not affected.
The affected component is the reStructuredText renderer:
nicegui/elements/restructured_text.pyprepare_content()prepare_content() renders user-supplied reStructuredText through Docutils:
html = publish_parts(
remove_indentation(content),
writer_name='html4',
settings_overrides={'syntax_highlight': 'short'},
)
The Docutils call only sets syntax_highlight. It does not disable file insertion or raw directives, so Docutils processes directives that read local files and embed their contents into the generated HTML before it is returned to the browser. Frontend sanitization cannot prevent this because the file has already been read server-side.
A minimal vulnerable usage pattern is any page that forwards untrusted input into ui.restructured_text(), e.g. content taken from query parameters, form fields, or other user-controlled sources.
Local file disclosure. An attacker who can supply reStructuredText content can read files accessible to the NiceGUI server process. Depending on deployment, this may expose:
.env filesThe confirmed impact is confidentiality loss through arbitrary local file read. Applications are only impacted when they pass untrusted or user-controlled reStructuredText into ui.restructured_text().
Disable unsafe Docutils features in prepare_content():
html = publish_parts(
remove_indentation(content),
writer_name='html4',
settings_overrides={
'syntax_highlight': 'short',
'file_insertion_enabled': False,
'raw_enabled': False,
'_disable_config': True,
},
)
This blocks the include, csv-table :file:, and raw :file: directives as well as local docutils.conf overrides.