296,748
Total vulnerabilities in the database
When using Astro's Cloudflare adapter (@astrojs/cloudflare) configured with output: 'server' while using the default imageService: 'compile', the generated image optimization endpoint doesn't check the URLs it receives, allowing content from unauthorized third-party domains to be served.
On-demand rendered sites built with Astro include an /_image endpoint, which returns optimized versions of images.
The /_image endpoint is restricted to processing local images bundled with the site and also supports remote images from domains the site developer has manually authorized (using the image.domains or image.remotePatterns options).
However, a bug in impacted versions of the @astrojs/cloudflare adapter for deployment on Cloudflare’s infrastructure, allows an attacker to bypass the third-party domain restrictions and serve any content from the vulnerable origin.
Create a new minimal Astro project (astro@5.13.3)
Configure it to use the Cloudflare adapter (@astrojs/cloudflare@12.6.5) and server output:
// astro.config.mjs
import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
import cloudflare from '@astrojs/cloudflare';
export default defineConfig({
output: 'server',
adapter: cloudflare(),
});
Deploy to Cloudflare Pages or Workers
Append /_image?href=https://placehold.co/600x400 to the deployment URL.
This will serve the placeholder image from the unauthorised placehold.co domain.
Allows a non-authorized third-party to create URLs on an impacted site’s origin that serve unauthorized content. This includes the risk of server-side request forgery (SSRF) and by extension cross-site scripting (XSS) if a user follows a link to a maliciously crafted URL.