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 tame-gcs

Dependencies

(11 total, 7 outdated, 2 possibly insecure)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 base64^0.10.10.22.0out of date
 bytes^0.4.121.6.0out of date
 chrono ⚠️^0.4.70.4.38maybe insecure
 failure^0.1.50.1.8up to date
 http ⚠️^0.1.171.1.0out of date
 ring^0.14.60.17.8out of date
 serde^1.0.941.0.198up to date
 serde_json^1.0.401.0.116up to date
 serde_urlencoded^0.5.50.7.1out of date
 untrusted^0.6.20.9.0out of date
 url^1.7.22.5.0out of date

Dev dependencies

(7 total, 6 outdated)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 ansi_term^0.11.00.12.1out of date
 difference^2.0.02.0.0up to date
 dotenv^0.14.10.15.0out of date
 indicatif^0.11.00.17.8out of date
 reqwest^0.9.180.12.3out of date
 structopt^0.2.180.3.26out of date
 tame-oauth^0.2.00.10.0out of date

Security Vulnerabilities

http: Integer Overflow in HeaderMap::reserve() can cause Denial of Service

RUSTSEC-2019-0033

HeaderMap::reserve() used usize::next_power_of_two() to calculate the increased capacity. However, next_power_of_two() silently overflows to 0 if given a sufficiently large number in release mode.

If the map was not empty when the overflow happens, the library will invoke self.grow(0) and start infinite probing. This allows an attacker who controls the argument to reserve() to cause a potential denial of service (DoS).

The flaw was corrected in 0.1.20 release of http crate.

http: HeaderMap::Drain API is unsound

RUSTSEC-2019-0034

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