- Reported
-
- Issued
-
- Package
-
gix-index
(crates.io)
- Type
-
Vulnerability
- Categories
-
- Keywords
-
#directory-traversal
- Aliases
-
- References
-
- CVSS Score
- 8.8
HIGH
- CVSS Details
-
- Attack vector
- Network
- Attack complexity
- Low
- Privileges required
- None
- User interaction
- Required
- Scope
- Unchanged
- Confidentiality
- High
- Integrity
- High
- Availability
- High
- CVSS Vector
- CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:R/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H
- Patched
-
Description
Summary
During checkout, gitoxide does not verify that paths point to locations in the working tree. A specially crafted repository can, when cloned, place new files anywhere writable by the application.
Details
Although gix-worktree-state
checks for collisions with existing files, it does not itself check if a path is really in the working tree when performing a checkout, nor do the path checks in gix-fs
and gix-worktree
prevent this. Cloning an untrusted repository containing specially crafted tree or blob names will create new files outside the repository, or inside the repository or a submodule's .git
directory. The simplest cases are:
- A tree named
..
to traverse upward. This facilitates arbitrary code execution because files can be placed in one or more locations where they are likely to be executed soon.
- A tree named
.git
to enter a .git
directory. This facilitates arbitrary code execution because hooks can be installed.
A number of alternatives that achieve the same effect are also possible, some of which correspond to specific vulnerabilities that have affected Git in the past:
- A tree or blob whose name contains one or more
/
, to traverse upward or downward. For example, even without containing any tree named ..
or .git
, a repository can represent a file named ../outside
or .git/hooks/pre-commit
. This is distinct from the more intuitive case a repository containing trees that represent those paths.
- In Windows, a tree or blob whose name contains one or more
\
, to traverse upward or downward. (Unlike /
, these are valid on other systems.) See GHSA-xjx4-8694-q2fq.
- On a case-insensitive filesystem (such as NTFS, APFS, or HFS+), a tree named as a case variant of
.git
.
- On HFS+, a tree named like
.git
or a case variant, with characters added that HFS+ ignores in collation. See https://github.com/git/git/commit/6162a1d323d24fd8cbbb1a6145a91fb849b2568f.
- On NTFS, a tree equivalent to
.git
(or a case variant) by the use of NTFS stream notation, such as .git::$INDEX_ALLOCATION
. See GHSA-5wph-8frv-58vj.
- On an NTFS volume with 8.3 aliasing enabled, a tree named as
git~1
(or a case variant). See GHSA-589j-mmg9-733v.
When a checkout creates some files outside the repository directory but fails to complete, the repository directory is usually removed, but the outside files remain.
PoC
For simplicity, these examples stage a stand-in file with a valid name, modify the index, and commit. The instructions assume sed
supports -i
, which is the case on most systems. If using Windows, a Git Bash shell should be used.
Example: Downward traversal to install hooks
- Create a new repository with
git init dangerous-repo-installs-hook
and cd
into the directory.
- Create the stand-in called
.git@hooks@pre-commit
, with the contents:
#!/bin/sh
printf 'Vulnerable!\n'
date >vulnerable
- Stage the stand-in:
git add --chmod=+x .git@hooks@pre-commit
- Edit the index:
env LC_ALL=C sed -i.orig 's|\.git@hooks@pre-commit|.git/hooks/pre-commit|' .git/index
- Commit:
git commit -m 'Initial commit'
- Optionally, push to a private remote.
Then, on another or the same machine:
- Clone the repository with a
gix clone …
command.
- Enter the newly created directory.
- Optionally run
ls -l .git/hooks
to observe that the pre-commit
hook is already present.
- Make a new file and commit it with
git
. This causes the payload surreptitiously installed as a pre-commit
hook to run, printing the message Vulnerable!
and creating a file in the current directory containing the current date and time.
Note that the effect is not limited to modifying the current directory. The payload could be written to perform any action that the user who runs git commit
is capable of.
Example: Upward traversal to create a file above the working tree
- Create a new repository with
git init dangerous-repo-reaches-up
, and cd
into the directory.
- Create the stand-in:
echo 'A file outside the working tree, somehow.' >..@outside
- Stage the stand-in:
git add ..@outside
- Edit the index:
env LC_ALL=C sed -i.orig 's|\.\.@outside|../outside|' .git/index
- Commit:
git commit -m 'Initial commit'
- Optionally, push to a private remote.
Then, as above, on the same or another machine, clone the repository with a gix clone …
command. Observe that a file named outside
is present alongside (not inside) the cloned directory.
Impact
Any use of gix
or another application that makes use of gix-worktree-state
, or otherwise relies on gix-fs
and gix-worktree
for validation, is affected, if used to clone untrusted repositories. The above description focuses on code execution, as that leads to a complete loss of confidentiality, integrity, and availability, but creating files outside a working tree without attempting to execute code can directly impact integrity as well.
In use cases where no untrusted repository is ever cloned, this vulnerability has no impact. Furthermore, the impact of this vulnerability may be lower when gix
is used to clone a repository for CI/CD purposes, even if untrusted, since in such uses the environment is usually isolated and arbitrary code is usually run deliberately from the repository with necessary safeguards in place.
Advisory available under CC0-1.0
license.