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Untrusted data can lead to DoS attack due to hash collisions and stack overflow, round 2

Moderate
AArnott published GHSA-4qm4-8hg2-g2xm Oct 17, 2024

Package

Codestin Search App MessagePack (NuGet)

Affected versions

< 2.5.187
>= 2.6.95-alpha, < 3.0.214-rc.1

Patched versions

2.5.187
3.0.214-rc.1

Description

Impact

When this library is used to deserialize messagepack data from an untrusted source, there is a risk of a denial of service attack by an attacker that sends data contrived to produce hash collisions, leading to large CPU consumption disproportionate to the size of the data being deserialized.

This is similar to a prior advisory, which provided an inadequate fix for the hash collision part of the vulnerability.

Patches

The following steps are required to mitigate this risk.

  1. Upgrade to a version of the library where a fix is available. If upgrading from v1, check out our migration guide.
  2. Review the steps in this previous advisory to ensure you have your application configured for untrusted data.

Workarounds

If upgrading MessagePack to a patched version is not an option for you, you may apply a manual workaround as follows:

  1. Declare a class that derives from MessagePackSecurity.
  2. Override the GetHashCollisionResistantEqualityComparer<T> method to provide a collision-resistant hash function of your own and avoid calling base.GetHashCollisionResistantEqualityComparer<T>().
  3. Configure a MessagePackSerializerOptions with an instance of your derived type by calling WithSecurity on an existing options object.
  4. Use your custom options object for all deserialization operations. This may be by setting the MessagePackSerializer.DefaultOptions static property, if you call methods that rely on this default property, and/or by passing in the options object explicitly to any Deserialize method.

References

For more information

If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:

Severity

Moderate

CVE ID

CVE-2024-48924

Weaknesses

Use of Weak Hash

The product uses an algorithm that produces a digest (output value) that does not meet security expectations for a hash function that allows an adversary to reasonably determine the original input (preimage attack), find another input that can produce the same hash (2nd preimage attack), or find multiple inputs that evaluate to the same hash (birthday attack). Learn more on MITRE.

Credits