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CVE Scan for supabase/storage-api:latest

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46 Known Vulnerabilities in this Docker Image

0
Critical
20
High
24
Medium
2
Low
0
Info/ Unspecified/ Unknown
CVE IDSeverityPackageAffected VersionFixed VersionCVSS Score
CVE-2026-12143highpkg:npm/form-data@4.0.5>=4.0.0,<4.0.64.0.68.7

Summary

form-data builds multipart/form-data request bodies. Through v4.0.5, the field name passed to FormData#append and the filename option are concatenated directly into the Content-Disposition header with no escaping of CR (\r), LF (\n), or ". An application that uses untrusted input as a field name or filename therefore lets an attacker terminate the header line and either inject additional headers or smuggle whole additional multipart parts into the request the application forwards to a backend.

This is CWE-93 (CRLF injection). It is a divergence from how browsers and the WHATWG HTML spec serialize form-data (they escape these characters), so the fix is to match that behavior. Severity is conditional: it depends on the consuming application passing attacker-controlled data as a field name or filename. Applications that only use fixed/trusted field names are not affected.

Details

In lib/form_data.js, _multiPartHeader builds the part header as:

'Content-Disposition': ['form-data', 'name="' + field + '"'].concat(contentDisposition || [])

and _getContentDisposition builds filename="' + filename + '"'. Neither escapes control characters, so a \r\n in field/filename ends the header line. The same applies to ", which can break out of the quoted parameter.

Proof of concept

const FormData = require('form-data');
const form = new FormData();
form.append('email"\r\nX-Injected: true\r\nfake="', 'user@example.com');
console.log(form.getBuffer().toString());

Before the fix this emits an injected X-Injected: true header line. A field name that also includes --<boundary> sequences can introduce additional parts (e.g. an extra name="is_admin" field), which a downstream parser accepts as legitimate.

Impact

For an application that uses untrusted field names/filenames:

  • Field injection / override (integrity). Inject or override fields the backend trusts (e.g. is_admin, role) — the primary demonstrated impact.
  • Header injection into the generated multipart part.

Claims of guaranteed privilege escalation, authentication bypass, high confidentiality impact, and availability impact are application-dependent downstream consequences, not properties of form-data itself, and are not demonstrated by the PoC.

Severity

The demonstrated, library-attributable impact is integrity (field/header injection); there is no demonstrated confidentiality disclosure or availability impact in form-data itself, and exploitation requires the consuming app to feed untrusted data into field names/filenames. A Moderate (≈5.3, I:L) rating is also defensible given that precondition.

Patch

Fixed in 4.0.6, 3.0.5, and 2.5.6. Users on older 0.x/1.x/2.x releases should upgrade to 2.5.6 or later.

The fix escapes \r, \n, and " as %0D, %0A, and %22 in field names and filenames, matching the WHATWG HTML multipart/form-data encoding algorithm that browsers implement. This neutralizes the injection while leaving ordinary field names (including name[0], dotted, and unicode names) unchanged.

Workaround

Until upgrading, validate or reject field names/filenames that contain control characters before calling append:

if (/[\r\n]/.test(field)) { throw new Error('invalid field name'); }

Credit

Reported by yueyueL.

Package URL(s):
  • pkg:npm/form-data@4.0.5
CVE-2026-11822highsqlite<=3.51.2-r0not fixed8.5
CVE-2026-11824highsqlite<=3.51.2-r0not fixed8.5
CVE-2026-44291highpkg:npm/protobufjs@8.0.1>=8.0.0,<=8.0.18.0.28.1
CVE-2026-44724highpkg:npm/systeminformation@5.31.2>=4.17.0,<=5.31.55.31.67.8
CVE-2026-6846highbinutils<=2.45.1-r0not fixed7.8
CVE-2026-44293highpkg:npm/protobufjs@8.0.1>=8.0.0,<=8.0.18.0.27.7
CVE-2025-69649highbinutils<=2.45.1-r0not fixed7.5
CVE-2025-69650highbinutils<=2.45.1-r0not fixed7.5
CVE-2026-12151highpkg:npm/undici@6.24.1>=7.0.0,<7.28.07.28.07.5

Severity Levels

Exploitation could lead to severe consequences, such as system compromise or data loss. Requires immediate attention.

Vulnerability could be exploited relatively easily and lead to significant impact. Requires prompt attention.

Exploitation is possible but might require specific conditions. Impact is moderate. Should be addressed in a timely manner.

Exploitation is difficult or impact is minimal. Address when convenient or as part of regular maintenance.

Severity is not determined, informational, or negligible. Review based on context.

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