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 rhai

Dependencies

(21 total, 3 outdated, 1 possibly insecure)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 ahash^0.8.40.8.12up to date
 arbitrary^1.3.21.4.2up to date
 bitflags^2.3.32.11.1up to date
 core-error^0.0.00.0.0up to date
 document-features^0.2.00.2.12up to date
 getrandom^0.3.40.4.2out of date
 hashbrown^0.16.00.17.1out of date
 libm^0.2.00.2.16up to date
 no-std-compat^0.4.10.4.1up to date
 num-traits^0.2.140.2.19up to date
 once_cell^1.20.11.21.4up to date
 rhai_codegen^3.2.03.2.0up to date
 rust_decimal^1.24.01.42.0up to date
 rustyline^15.0.018.0.0out of date
 serde^1.0.1361.0.228up to date
 serde_json^1.0.451.0.150up to date
 smallvec^1.7.01.15.1up to date
 smartstring^1.0.01.0.1up to date
 thin-vec ⚠️^0.2.130.2.18maybe insecure
 unicode-xid^0.2.00.2.6up to date
 web-time^1.1.01.1.0up to date

Dev dependencies

(2 total, all up-to-date)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 rmp-serde^1.1.11.3.1up to date
 serde_json^1.0.451.0.150up to date

Security Vulnerabilities

thin-vec: Use-After-Free and Double Free in IntoIter::drop When Element Drop Panics

RUSTSEC-2026-0103

A Double Free / Use-After-Free (UAF) vulnerability has been identified in the IntoIter::drop and ThinVec::clear implementations of the thin-vec crate. Both vulnerabilities share the same root cause and can trigger memory corruption using only safe Rust code - no unsafe blocks required. Undefined Behavior has been confirmed via Miri and AddressSanitizer (ASAN).

Details

When a panic occurs during sequential element deallocation, the subsequent length cleanup code (set_len(0)) is never executed. During stack unwinding, the container is dropped again, causing already-freed memory to be re-freed (Double Free / UAF).

Vulnerability 1 - IntoIter::drop

IntoIter::drop transfers ownership of the internal buffer via mem::replace, then sequentially frees elements via ptr::drop_in_place. If a panic occurs during element deallocation, set_len_non_singleton(0) is never reached. During unwinding, vec is dropped again, re-freeing already-freed elements. The standard library's std::vec::IntoIter prevents this with a DropGuard pattern, but thin-vec lacks this defense.

PoC

use thin_vec::ThinVec;

struct PanicBomb(String);

impl Drop for PanicBomb {
    fn drop(&mut self) {
        if self.0 == "panic" {
            panic!("panic!");
        }
        println!("Dropping: {}", self.0);
    }
}

fn main() {
    let mut v = ThinVec::new();
    v.push(PanicBomb(String::from("normal1")));
    v.push(PanicBomb(String::from("panic")));  // trigger element
    v.push(PanicBomb(String::from("normal2")));

    let mut iter = v.into_iter();
    iter.next();
    // When iter is dropped: panic occurs at "panic" element
    // → During unwinding, Double Drop is triggered on "normal1" (already freed)
}

Vulnerability 2 - ThinVec::clear

clear() calls ptr::drop_in_place(&mut self[..]) followed by self.set_len(0) to reset the length. If a panic occurs during element deallocation, set_len(0) is never executed. When the ThinVec itself is subsequently dropped, already-freed elements are freed again.

PoC

use thin_vec::ThinVec;
use std::panic;

struct Poison(Box<usize>, &'static str);

impl Drop for Poison {
    fn drop(&mut self) {
        if self.1 == "panic" {
            panic!("panic!");
        }
        println!("Dropping: {}", self.0);
    }
}

fn main() {
    let mut v = ThinVec::new();
    v.push(Poison(Box::new(1), "normal1")); // index 0
    v.push(Poison(Box::new(2), "panic"));   // index 1 → panic triggered here
    v.push(Poison(Box::new(3), "normal2")); // index 2

    let _ = panic::catch_unwind(panic::AssertUnwindSafe(|| {
        v.clear();
        // panic occurs at "panic" element during clear()
        // → set_len(0) is never called
        // → already-freed elements are re-freed when v goes out of scope
    }));
}

Prerequisites

  1. ThinVec stores heap-owning types (String, Vec, Box, etc.)
  2. (Vulnerability 1) An iterator is created via into_iter() and dropped before being fully consumed, or (Vulnerability 2) clear() is called while a remaining element's Drop implementation can panic
  3. The Drop implementation of a remaining element triggers a panic

When combined with Box<dyn Trait> types, an exploit primitive enabling Arbitrary Code Execution (ACE) via heap spray and vtable hijacking has been confirmed. If the freed fat pointer slot (16 bytes) at the point of Double Drop is reclaimed by an attacker-controlled fake vtable, subsequent Drop calls can be redirected to attacker-controlled code.