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 fake

Dependencies

(19 total, 7 outdated, 2 possibly insecure)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 bigdecimal^0.40.4.10up to date
 chrono ⚠️^0.40.4.44maybe insecure
 chrono-tz^0.80.10.4out of date
 deunicode^1.41.6.2up to date
 dummy^0.70.11.0out of date
 geo-types^0.70.7.18up to date
 glam^0.240.32.0out of date
 http^11.4.0up to date
 num-traits^0.20.2.19up to date
 rand^0.80.10.0out of date
 rand_core^0.60.10.0out of date
 random_color^0.61.1.0out of date
 rust_decimal^1.321.40.0up to date
 semver^11.0.27up to date
 serde_json^1.01.0.149up to date
 time ⚠️^0.30.3.47maybe insecure
 url-escape^0.10.1.1up to date
 uuid^1.51.21.0up to date
 zerocopy^0.70.8.39out of date

Dev dependencies

(3 total, 1 outdated, 1 possibly insecure)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 chrono ⚠️^0.40.4.44maybe insecure
 proptest^1.0.01.10.0up to date
 rand_chacha^0.30.10.0out of date

Security Vulnerabilities

chrono: Potential segfault in `localtime_r` invocations

RUSTSEC-2020-0159

Impact

Unix-like operating systems may segfault due to dereferencing a dangling pointer in specific circumstances. This requires an environment variable to be set in a different thread than the affected functions. This may occur without the user's knowledge, notably in a third-party library.

Workarounds

No workarounds are known.

References

time: Denial of Service via Stack Exhaustion

RUSTSEC-2026-0009

Impact

When user-provided input is provided to any type that parses with the RFC 2822 format, a denial of service attack via stack exhaustion is possible. The attack relies on formally deprecated and rarely-used features that are part of the RFC 2822 format used in a malicious manner. Ordinary, non-malicious input will never encounter this scenario.

Patches

A limit to the depth of recursion was added in v0.3.47. From this version, an error will be returned rather than exhausting the stack.

Workarounds

Limiting the length of user input is the simplest way to avoid stack exhaustion, as the amount of the stack consumed would be at most a factor of the length of the input.