Uninitialized Memory Exposure Affecting put package, versions *


0.0
low

Snyk CVSS

    Attack Complexity High
    Privileges Required High
    User Interaction Required

    Threat Intelligence

    Exploit Maturity Mature

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  • Snyk ID npm:put:20180614
  • published 24 Jul 2018
  • disclosed 14 Jun 2018
  • credit ChALkeR

Introduced: 14 Jun 2018

CVE NOT AVAILABLE CWE-399 Open this link in a new tab

How to fix?

There is no fix version for put.

Overview

put Pack multibyte binary values into buffers with specific endiannesses.

Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to Uninitialized Memory Exposure. It incorrectly calculates the total length of the allocated Buffer and does not trim it to the total bytes written.

Details

The Buffer class on Node.js is a mutable array of binary data, and can be initialized with a string, array or number.

const buf1 = new Buffer([1,2,3]);
// creates a buffer containing [01, 02, 03]
const buf2 = new Buffer('test');
// creates a buffer containing ASCII bytes [74, 65, 73, 74]
const buf3 = new Buffer(10);
// creates a buffer of length 10

The first two variants simply create a binary representation of the value it received. The last one, however, pre-allocates a buffer of the specified size, making it a useful buffer, especially when reading data from a stream. When using the number constructor of Buffer, it will allocate the memory, but will not fill it with zeros. Instead, the allocated buffer will hold whatever was in memory at the time. If the buffer is not zeroed by using buf.fill(0), it may leak sensitive information like keys, source code, and system info.

References