Thursday, November 14, 2024
HomeCVE/vulnerabilityCritical "Netmask" npm Package Flaw Affects Hundreds of Thousands of Applications

Critical “Netmask” npm Package Flaw Affects Hundreds of Thousands of Applications

Published on

Cybersecurity researchers Victor Viale, Sick Codes, Nick Sahler, Kelly Kaoudis, and John Jackson have recently detected a severe networking vulnerability in the Netmask npm package. In general, the apps use the Netmask to parse IPv4 addresses, and the CIDR relates them.

Apart from this, the component has procured more than 238 million downloads till now in its lifetime, and near about 278,000 GitHub repositories are also dependent on the netmask.

Due to the presence of the bug in the library, the netmask attends a distinct IP while parsing an IP address with zero in the lead, and this occurs due to the incorrect validations in place.

- Advertisement - SIEM as a Service

Leading Zero Alters the IP address

The security flaw that is being detected by the security experts is identified as “CVE-2021-28918,” and this flaw affects the working method and chain of the netmask.

The IPv4 addresses are generally expressed in decimal format, but the fact is that an IP address can be expressed in several formats.

Let’s make it a bit more clear, suppose your system’s IPv4 address interpreted in decimal format (106.30.67.309), but due to the bug, the same IP could be displayed as 0780.0034.0014.0214, in octal format.

Suppose we give you an IP in a decimal format which is broadly conceived as the local loopback address or localhost, “127.0.0.1.” What if here we ask you to put a 0 before it? Will it parse 0127.0.0.1 as 127.0.0.1 or something else?

While I tried this on the address bar of my Chrome web browser, it parsed me to this IP “87.0.0.1,” as this is how the apps are made to handle these type of obscure IPs.

SSRF bypass to Remote File Inclusion

Initially, this bug may seem harmless, but, in reality, this flaw can lead an attacker to influence the IP address input and accelerate the inflation of various other security flaws from Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF) bypass to RFI (Remote File Inclusion).

Moreover, the threat actors can easily exploit this flaw for Remote File Inclusion (RFI) with an IP address that seems private to the netmask.

There are many projects that use the netmask for IP parsing, and that’s why this security vulnerability is concerning security analysts.

Security fixes

The cybersecurity analysts who have discovered and reported the “CVE-2021-28918” flaw has pushed out a series of fixes. And with the netmask version 2.0.0, the researchers have fixed the “CVE-2021-28918” security flaw.

So, currently, the security analysts have strongly recommended the users upgrade their outdated netmask version to the fixed version 2.0.0. And to spread this awareness, they have also published their findings on different platforms.

You can follow us on Linkedin, Twitter, Facebook for daily Cybersecurity, and hacking news updates.

Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

Google Unveils New Intelligent, Real-Time Protections for Android Users

Google has once again raised the bar for mobile security by introducing two new...

Chinese National Faces 20 Years of Jail Time for Laundering Millions in Crypto

Daren Li, 41, a dual citizen of China and St. Kitts and Nevis, and...

Google to Issue CVEs for Critical Cloud Vulnerabilities

Google Cloud has announced a significant step forward in its commitment to transparency and...

GitLab Patches Critical Flaws Leads to Unauthorized Access to Kubernetes Cluster

GitLab has rolled out critical security updates to address multiple vulnerabilities in its Community...

Free Webinar

Protect Websites & APIs from Malware Attack

Malware targeting customer-facing websites and API applications poses significant risks, including compliance violations, defacements, and even blacklisting.

Join us for an insightful webinar featuring Vivek Gopalan, VP of Products at Indusface, as he shares effective strategies for safeguarding websites and APIs against malware.

Discussion points

Scan DOM, internal links, and JavaScript libraries for hidden malware.
Detect website defacements in real time.
Protect your brand by monitoring for potential blacklisting.
Prevent malware from infiltrating your server and cloud infrastructure.

More like this

Google Unveils New Intelligent, Real-Time Protections for Android Users

Google has once again raised the bar for mobile security by introducing two new...

Chinese National Faces 20 Years of Jail Time for Laundering Millions in Crypto

Daren Li, 41, a dual citizen of China and St. Kitts and Nevis, and...

Google to Issue CVEs for Critical Cloud Vulnerabilities

Google Cloud has announced a significant step forward in its commitment to transparency and...