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NextAuth.js before 4.10.3 and 3.29.10 sending verification requests (magic link) to unwanted emails

Critical severity GitHub Reviewed Published Aug 2, 2022 in nextauthjs/next-auth • Updated Jan 31, 2023

Package

npm next-auth (npm)

Affected versions

>= 4.0.0, < 4.10.3
< 3.29.10

Patched versions

4.10.3
3.29.10

Description

Impact

next-auth users who are using the EmailProvider either in versions before 4.10.3 or 3.29.10 are affected.

If an attacker could forge a request that sent a comma-separated list of emails (eg.: attacker@attacker.com,victim@victim.com) to the sign-in endpoint, NextAuth.js would send emails to both the attacker and the victim's e-mail addresses. The attacker could then login as a newly created user with the email being attacker@attacker.com,victim@victim.com. This means that basic authorization like email.endsWith("@victim.com") in the signIn callback would fail to communicate a threat to the developer and would let the attacker bypass authorization, even with an @attacker.com address.

Patches

We patched this vulnerability in v4.10.3 and v3.29.10 by normalizing the email value that is sent to the sign-in endpoint before accessing it anywhere else. We also added a normalizeIdentifier callback on the EmailProvider configuration, where you can further tweak your requirements for what your system considers a valid e-mail address. (E.g.: strict RFC2821 compliance)

To upgrade, run one of the following:

npm i next-auth@latest
yarn add next-auth@latest
pnpm add next-auth@latest

(This will update to the latest v4 version, but you can change latest to 3 if you want to stay on v3. This is not recommended. v3 is unmaintained.)

Workarounds

If for some reason you cannot upgrade, you can normalize the incoming request like the following, using Advanced Initialization:

// pages/api/auth/[...nextauth].ts

function normalize(identifier) {
  // Get the first two elements only,
  // separated by `@` from user input.
  let [local, domain] = identifier.toLowerCase().trim().split("@")
  // The part before "@" can contain a ","
  // but we remove it on the domain part
  domain = domain.split(",")[0]
  return `${local}@${domain}`
}

export default async function handler(req, res) {
  if (req.body.email) req.body.email = normalize(req.body.email)
  return await NextAuth(req, res, {/* your options */ })
}

References

For more information

If you have any concerns, we request responsible disclosure, outlined here: https://next-auth.js.org/security#reporting-a-vulnerability

Timeline

The issue was reported 26th of July, a response was sent out in less than 1 hour and after identifying the issue a patch was published within 5 working days.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank Socket for disclosing this vulnerability in a responsible manner and following up until it got published.

References

@balazsorban44 balazsorban44 published to nextauthjs/next-auth Aug 2, 2022
Published to the GitHub Advisory Database Aug 2, 2022
Reviewed Aug 2, 2022
Published by the National Vulnerability Database Aug 2, 2022
Last updated Jan 31, 2023

Severity

Critical
9.1
/ 10

CVSS base metrics

Attack vector
Network
Attack complexity
Low
Privileges required
None
User interaction
None
Scope
Unchanged
Confidentiality
High
Integrity
High
Availability
None
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:N

CVE ID

CVE-2022-35924

GHSA ID

GHSA-xv97-c62v-4587

Source code

Credits

Checking history
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