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 postgres-types

Dependencies

(16 total, 2 outdated, 1 possibly insecure)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 array-init^22.1.0up to date
 bit-vec^0.80.8.0up to date
 bytes ⚠️^1.01.11.1maybe insecure
 chrono^0.4.330.4.43up to date
 cidr^0.30.3.2up to date
 eui48^1.01.1.0up to date
 fallible-iterator^0.20.3.0out of date
 geo-types^0.7.80.7.18up to date
 jiff^0.20.2.19up to date
 postgres-derive^0.4.70.4.7up to date
 postgres-protocol^0.6.90.6.10up to date
 serde_core^1.0.2211.0.228up to date
 serde_json^1.0.1441.0.149up to date
 smol_str^0.1.230.3.5out of date
 time^0.3.50.3.47up to date
 uuid^1.01.20.0up to date

Security Vulnerabilities

bytes: Integer overflow in `BytesMut::reserve`

RUSTSEC-2026-0007

In the unique reclaim path of BytesMut::reserve, the condition

if v_capacity >= new_cap + offset

uses an unchecked addition. When new_cap + offset overflows usize in release builds, this condition may incorrectly pass, causing self.cap to be set to a value that exceeds the actual allocated capacity. Subsequent APIs such as spare_capacity_mut() then trust this corrupted cap value and may create out-of-bounds slices, leading to UB.

This behavior is observable in release builds (integer overflow wraps), whereas debug builds panic due to overflow checks.

PoC

use bytes::*;

fn main() {
    let mut a = BytesMut::from(&b"hello world"[..]);
    let mut b = a.split_off(5);

    // Ensure b becomes the unique owner of the backing storage
    drop(a);

    // Trigger overflow in new_cap + offset inside reserve
    b.reserve(usize::MAX - 6);

    // This call relies on the corrupted cap and may cause UB & HBO
    b.put_u8(b'h');
}

Workarounds

Users of BytesMut::reserve are only affected if integer overflow checks are configured to wrap. When integer overflow is configured to panic, this issue does not apply.