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CVE-2023-29020: CSRF token fixation in fastify-passport

@fastify/passport is a port of passport authentication library for the Fastify ecosystem. The CSRF (Cross-Site Request Forger) protection enforced by the @fastify/csrf-protection library, when combined with @fastify/passport in affected versions, can be bypassed by network and same-site attackers. fastify/csrf-protection implements the synchronizer token pattern (using plugins @fastify/session and @fastify/secure-session) by storing a random value used for CSRF token generation in the _csrf attribute of a user’s session. The @fastify/passport library does not clear the session object upon authentication, preserving the _csrf attribute between pre-login and authenticated sessions. Consequently, CSRF tokens generated before authentication are still valid. Network and same-site attackers can thus obtain a CSRF token for their pre-session, fixate that pre-session in the victim’s browser via cookie tossing, and then perform a CSRF attack after the victim authenticates. As a solution, newer versions of @fastify/passport include the configuration options: clearSessionOnLogin (default: true) and clearSessionIgnoreFields (default: ['passport', 'session']) to clear all the session attributes by default, preserving those explicitly defined in clearSessionIgnoreFields.

CVE
#csrf#auth

The CSRF protection enforced by the @fastify/csrf-protection library, when combined with @fastify/passport, can be bypassed by network and same-site attackers.

Details

fastify/csrf-protection implements the synchronizer token pattern (using plugins @fastify/session and @fastify/secure-session) by storing a random value used for CSRF token generation in the _csrf attribute of a user’s session.

The @fastify/passport library does not clear the session object upon authentication, preserving the _csrf attribute between pre-login and authenticated sessions. Consequently, CSRF tokens generated before authentication are still valid. Network and same-site attackers can thus obtain a CSRF token for their pre-session, fixate that pre-session in the victim’s browser via cookie tossing, and then perform a CSRF attack after the victim authenticates.

Fix

As a solution, newer versions of @fastify/passport include the configuration options

  • clearSessionOnLogin (default: true) and
  • clearSessionIgnoreFields (default: [‘session’])

to clear all the session attributes by default, preserving those explicitly defined in clearSessionIgnoreFields.

Credits

  • Pedro Adão (@pedromigueladao), Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon
  • Marco Squarcina (@lavish), Security & Privacy Research Unit, TU Wien

Related news

GHSA-2ccf-ffrj-m4qw: CSRF token fixation in fastify-passport

The [CSRF](https://owasp.org/www-community/attacks/csrf) protection enforced by the `@fastify/csrf-protection` library, when combined with `@fastify/passport`, can be bypassed by network and same-site attackers. ## Details `fastify/csrf-protection` implements the [synchronizer token pattern](https://cheatsheetseries.owasp.org/cheatsheets/Cross-Site_Request_Forgery_Prevention_Cheat_Sheet.html#synchronizer-token-pattern) (using plugins `@fastify/session` and `@fastify/secure-session`) by storing a random value used for CSRF token generation in the `_csrf` attribute of a user's session. The `@fastify/passport` library does not clear the session object upon authentication, preserving the `_csrf` attribute between pre-login and authenticated sessions. Consequently, CSRF tokens generated before authentication are still valid. Network and [same-site attackers](https://canitakeyoursubdomain.name/) can thus obtain a CSRF token for their pre-session, fixate that pre-session in the victim's bro...

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