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🚨 [security] Update katex 0.13.24 → 0.16.10 (major)
🚨 Your current dependencies have known security vulnerabilities 🚨
This dependency update fixes known security vulnerabilities. Please see the details below and assess their impact carefully. We recommend to merge and deploy this as soon as possible!
Here is everything you need to know about this upgrade. Please take a good look at what changed and the test results before merging this pull request.
What changed?
✳️ katex (0.13.24 → 0.16.10) · Repo · Changelog
Security Advisories 🚨
🚨 KaTeX's maxExpand bypassed by `\edef`
Impact
KaTeX users who render untrusted mathematical expressions could encounter malicious input using
\edef
that causes a near-infinite loop, despite settingmaxExpand
to avoid such loops. This can be used as an availability attack, where e.g. a client rendering another user's KaTeX input will be unable to use the site due to memory overflow, tying up the main thread, or stack overflow.Patches
Upgrade to KaTeX v0.16.10 to remove this vulnerability.
Workarounds
Forbid inputs containing the substring
"\\edef"
before passing them to KaTeX.
(There is no easy workaround for the auto-render extension.)Details
KaTeX supports an option named
maxExpand
which prevents infinitely recursive macros from consuming all available memory and/or triggering a stack overflow error. However, what counted as an "expansion" is a single macro expanding to any number of tokens. The expand-and-define TeX command\edef
can be used to build up an exponential number of tokens using only a linear number of expansions according to this definition, e.g. by repeatedly doubling the previous definition. This has been corrected in KaTeX v0.16.10, where every expanded token in an\edef
counts as an expansion.For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
- Open an issue or security advisory in the KaTeX repository
- Email us at [email protected]
🚨 KaTeX's maxExpand bypassed by Unicode sub/superscripts
Impact
KaTeX users who render untrusted mathematical expressions could encounter malicious input using
\def
or\newcommand
that causes a near-infinite loop, despite settingmaxExpand
to avoid such loops. This can be used as an availability attack, where e.g. a client rendering another user's KaTeX input will be unable to use the site due to memory overflow, tying up the main thread, or stack overflow.Patches
Upgrade to KaTeX v0.16.10 to remove this vulnerability.
Workarounds
Forbid inputs containing any of the characters
₊₋₌₍₎₀₁₂₃₄₅₆₇₈₉ₐₑₕᵢⱼₖₗₘₙₒₚᵣₛₜᵤᵥₓᵦᵧᵨᵩᵪ⁺⁻⁼⁽⁾⁰¹²³⁴⁵⁶⁷⁸⁹ᵃᵇᶜᵈᵉᵍʰⁱʲᵏˡᵐⁿᵒᵖʳˢᵗᵘʷˣʸᶻᵛᵝᵞᵟᵠᵡ
before passing them to KaTeX.
(There is no easy workaround for the auto-render extension.)Details
KaTeX supports an option named
maxExpand
which aims to prevent infinitely recursive macros from consuming all available memory and/or triggering a stack overflow error. Unfortunately, support for "Unicode (sub|super)script characters" allows an attacker to bypass this limit. Each sub/superscript group instantiated a separate Parser with its own limit on macro executions, without inheriting the current count of macro executions from its parent. This has been corrected in KaTeX v0.16.10.For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
- Open an issue or security advisory in the KaTeX repository
- Email us at [email protected]
🚨 KaTeX's `\includegraphics` does not escape filename
Impact
KaTeX users who render untrusted mathematical expressions could encounter malicious input using
\includegraphics
that runs arbitrary JavaScript, or generate invalid HTML.Patches
Upgrade to KaTeX v0.16.10 to remove this vulnerability.
Workarounds
- Avoid use of or turn off the
trust
option, or set it to forbid\includegraphics
commands.- Forbid inputs containing the substring
"\\includegraphics"
.- Sanitize HTML output from KaTeX.
Details
\includegraphics
did not properly quote its filename argument, allowing it to generate invalid or malicious HTML that runs scripts.For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
- Open an issue or security advisory in the KaTeX repository
- Email us at [email protected]
🚨 KaTeX missing normalization of the protocol in URLs allows bypassing forbidden protocols
Impact
Code that uses KaTeX's
trust
option, specifically that provides a function to block-list certain URL protocols, can be fooled by URLs in malicious inputs that use uppercase characters in the protocol. In particular, this can allow for malicious input to generatejavascript:
links in the output, even if thetrust
function tries to forbid this protocol viatrust: (context) => context.protocol !== 'javascript'
.Patches
Upgrade to KaTeX v0.16.10 to remove this vulnerability.
Workarounds
- Allow-list instead of block protocols in your
trust
function.- Manually lowercase
context.protocol
viacontext.protocol.toLowerCase()
before attempting to check for certain protocols.- Avoid use of or turn off the
trust
option.Details
KaTeX did not normalize the
protocol
entry of thecontext
object provided to a user-specifiedtrust
-function, so it could be a mix of lowercase and/or uppercase letters.It is generally better to allow-list by protocol, in which case this would normally not be an issue. But in some cases, you might want to block-list, and the KaTeX documentation even provides such an example:
Allow all commands but forbid specific protocol:
trust: (context) => context.protocol !== 'file'
Currently KaTeX internally sees
file:
andFile:
URLs as different protocols, socontext.protocol
can befile
orFile
, so the above check does not suffice. A simple workaround would be:
trust: (context) => context.protocol.toLowerCase() !== 'file'
Most URL parsers normalize the scheme to lowercase. For example, RFC3986 says:
Although schemes are case-insensitive, the canonical form is lowercase and documents that specify schemes must do so with lowercase letters. An implementation should accept uppercase letters as equivalent to lowercase in scheme names (e.g., allow "HTTP" as well as "http") for the sake of robustness but should only produce lowercase scheme names for consistency.
Release Notes
Too many releases to show here. View the full release notes.
Commits
See the full diff on Github. The new version differs by more commits than we can show here.
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