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 shuttle-common

Dependencies

(32 total, 14 outdated, 1 possibly insecure)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 anyhow^1.0.661.0.93up to date
 async-trait^0.1.580.1.83up to date
 axum^0.6.130.7.9out of date
 bytes^1.3.01.8.0up to date
 chrono^0.4.340.4.38up to date
 comfy-table^6.2.07.1.3out of date
 crossterm^0.27.00.28.1out of date
 headers^0.3.80.4.0out of date
 http^0.2.81.1.0out of date
 http-body^0.4.51.0.1out of date
 jsonwebtoken^9.0.09.3.0up to date
 opentelemetry^0.21.00.27.0out of date
 opentelemetry-http^0.10.00.27.0out of date
 pin-project^1.0.121.1.7up to date
 rand^0.8.50.8.5up to date
 reqwest^0.11.130.12.9out of date
 semver^1.0.171.0.23up to date
 serde^1.0.1481.0.215up to date
 serde_json^1.0.891.0.133up to date
 sqlx ⚠️^0.7.10.8.2out of date
 strum^0.26.10.26.3up to date
 thiserror^22.0.3up to date
 tonic^0.10.20.12.3out of date
 tower^0.4.130.5.1out of date
 tracing^0.1.370.1.40up to date
 tracing-opentelemetry^0.22.00.28.0out of date
 tracing-subscriber^0.3.160.3.18up to date
 typeshare^1.0.31.0.4up to date
 url=2.5.22.5.4out of date
 uuid^1.2.21.11.0up to date
 wiremock^0.6.00.6.2up to date
 zeroize^1.6.01.8.1up to date

Dev dependencies

(1 total, all up-to-date)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 proptest^1.1.01.5.0up to date

Security Vulnerabilities

sqlx: Binary Protocol Misinterpretation caused by Truncating or Overflowing Casts

RUSTSEC-2024-0363

The following presentation at this year's DEF CON was brought to our attention on the SQLx Discord:

SQL Injection isn't Dead: Smuggling Queries at the Protocol Level
http://web.archive.org/web/20240812130923/https://media.defcon.org/DEF%20CON%2032/DEF%20CON%2032%20presentations/DEF%20CON%2032%20-%20Paul%20Gerste%20-%20SQL%20Injection%20Isn't%20Dead%20Smuggling%20Queries%20at%20the%20Protocol%20Level.pdf
(Archive link for posterity.)

Essentially, encoding a value larger than 4GiB can cause the length prefix in the protocol to overflow, causing the server to interpret the rest of the string as binary protocol commands or other data.

It appears SQLx does perform truncating casts in a way that could be problematic, for example: https://github.com/launchbadge/sqlx/blob/6f2905695b9606b5f51b40ce10af63ac9e696bb8/sqlx-postgres/src/arguments.rs#L163

This code has existed essentially since the beginning, so it is reasonable to assume that all published versions <= 0.8.0 are affected.

Mitigation

As always, you should make sure your application is validating untrustworthy user input. Reject any input over 4 GiB, or any input that could encode to a string longer than 4 GiB. Dynamically built queries are also potentially problematic if it pushes the message size over this 4 GiB bound.

Encode::size_hint() can be used for sanity checks, but do not assume that the size returned is accurate. For example, the Json<T> and Text<T> adapters have no reasonable way to predict or estimate the final encoded size, so they just return size_of::<T>() instead.

For web application backends, consider adding some middleware that limits the size of request bodies by default.

Resolution

sqlx 0.8.1 has been released with the fix: https://github.com/launchbadge/sqlx/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md#081---2024-08-23

Postgres users are advised to upgrade ASAP as a possible exploit has been demonstrated: https://github.com/launchbadge/sqlx/issues/3440#issuecomment-2307956901

MySQL and SQLite do not appear to be exploitable, but upgrading is recommended nonetheless.