sequelize is an Object-relational mapping, or a middleman to convert things from Postgres, MySQL, MariaDB, SQLite and Microsoft SQL Server into usable data for NodeJS In Postgres, SQLite, and Microsoft SQL Server there is an issue where arrays are treated as strings and improperly escaped. This causes potential SQL injection in sequelize 3.19.3 and earlier, where a malicious user could put `["test", "'); DELETE TestTable WHERE Id = 1 --')"]` inside of ``` database.query('SELECT * FROM TestTable WHERE Name IN (:names)', { replacements: { names: directCopyOfUserInput } }); ``` and cause the SQL statement to become `SELECT Id FROM Table WHERE Name IN ('test', '\'); DELETE TestTable WHERE Id = 1 --')`. In Postgres, MSSQL, and SQLite, the backslash has no special meaning. This causes the the statement to delete whichever Id has a value of 1 in the TestTable table.
References
Link Resource
https://github.com/sequelize/sequelize/issues/5671 Exploit Issue Tracking Third Party Advisory
https://nodesecurity.io/advisories/102 Third Party Advisory
History

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cve-icon MITRE Information

Status: PUBLISHED

Assigner: hackerone

Published: 2018-04-26T00:00:00

Updated: 2018-05-30T12:57:01

Reserved: 2017-10-29T00:00:00


Link: CVE-2016-10556

JSON object: View

cve-icon NVD Information

Status : Modified

Published: 2018-05-29T20:29:00.750

Modified: 2019-10-09T23:16:46.403


Link: CVE-2016-10556

JSON object: View

cve-icon Redhat Information

No data.

CWE