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 tract-nnef

Dependencies

(14 total, 1 outdated, 1 possibly insecure)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 byteorder^1.4.31.5.0up to date
 erased-serde^0.40.4.10up to date
 flate2^1.0.201.1.9up to date
 log^0.4.140.4.33up to date
 minijinja^2.19.02.21.0up to date
 nom^8.0.08.0.0up to date
 nom-language^0.10.1.0up to date
 safetensors^0.70.8.0out of date
 serde^1.0.1271.0.228up to date
 serde_json^1.01.0.150up to date
 simd-adler32^0.3.70.3.9up to date
 tar ⚠️^0.4.370.4.46maybe insecure
 tract-core=0.23.30.23.3up to date
 walkdir^2.3.22.5.0up to date

Dev dependencies

(2 total, all up-to-date)

CrateRequiredLatestStatus
 serde_json^1.01.0.150up to date
 temp-dir^0.2.00.2.0up to date

Security Vulnerabilities

tar: `unpack_in` can chmod arbitrary directories by following symlinks

RUSTSEC-2026-0067

In versions 0.4.44 and below of tar-rs, when unpacking a tar archive, the tar crate's unpack_dir function uses fs::metadata() to check whether a path that already exists is a directory. Because fs::metadata() follows symbolic links, a crafted tarball containing a symlink entry followed by a directory entry with the same name causes the crate to treat the symlink target as a valid existing directory — and subsequently apply chmod to it. This allows an attacker to modify the permissions of arbitrary directories outside the extraction root.

This issue has been fixed in version 0.4.45.

tar: tar-rs incorrectly ignores PAX size headers if header size is nonzero

RUSTSEC-2026-0068

Versions 0.4.44 and below of tar-rs have conditional logic that skips the PAX size header in cases where the base header size is nonzero.

As part of CVE-2025-62518, the astral-tokio-tar project was changed to correctly honor PAX size headers in the case where it was different from the base header. This is almost the inverse of the astral-tokio-tar issue.

Any discrepancy in how tar parsers honor file size can be used to create archives that appear differently when unpacked by different archivers. In this case, the tar-rs (Rust tar) crate is an outlier in checking for the header size — other tar parsers (including e.g. Go archive/tar) unconditionally use the PAX size override. This can affect anything that uses the tar crate to parse archives and expects to have a consistent view with other parsers.

This issue has been fixed in version 0.4.45.