This project might be open to known security vulnerabilities, which can be prevented by tightening the version range of affected dependencies. Find detailed information at the bottom.

Crate exonum-rust-runtime

Dependencies

(12 total, 3 outdated, 2 possibly insecure)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 actix-web^2.0.04.11.0out of date
 exonum^1.0.01.0.0up to date
 exonum-api^1.0.01.0.0up to date
 exonum-derive^1.0.01.0.0up to date
 exonum-merkledb^1.0.01.0.0up to date
 exonum-proto^1.0.01.0.0up to date
 futures^0.3.40.3.31up to date
 log^0.4.80.4.27up to date
 protobuf ⚠️^2.10.13.7.2out of date
 serde^1.0.1011.0.219up to date
 serde_derive^1.0.1011.0.219up to date
 tokio ⚠️^0.2.111.46.0out of date

Dev dependencies

(8 total, 4 outdated)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 anyhow^1.0.261.0.98up to date
 assert_matches^1.3.01.5.0up to date
 bincode^1.2.12.0.1out of date
 criterion^0.3.00.6.0out of date
 pretty_assertions^0.6.11.4.1out of date
 rand^0.70.9.1out of date
 serde_json^1.0.441.0.140up to date
 tempfile^33.20.0up to date

Security Vulnerabilities

tokio: Data race when sending and receiving after closing a `oneshot` channel

RUSTSEC-2021-0124

If a tokio::sync::oneshot channel is closed (via the oneshot::Receiver::close method), a data race may occur if the oneshot::Sender::send method is called while the corresponding oneshot::Receiver is awaited or calling try_recv.

When these methods are called concurrently on a closed channel, the two halves of the channel can concurrently access a shared memory location, resulting in a data race. This has been observed to cause memory corruption.

Note that the race only occurs when both halves of the channel are used after the Receiver half has called close. Code where close is not used, or where the Receiver is not awaited and try_recv is not called after calling close, is not affected.

See tokio#4225 for more details.

protobuf: Crash due to uncontrolled recursion in protobuf crate

RUSTSEC-2024-0437

Affected version of this crate did not properly parse unknown fields when parsing a user-supplied input.

This allows an attacker to cause a stack overflow when parsing the mssage on untrusted data.