Impact
Local information disclosure of sensitive information downloaded via the API using the API Client.
Finding
The Datadog API is executed on a unix-like system with multiple users. The API is used to download a file containing sensitive information. This sensitive information is exposed locally to other users. This vulnerability exists in the API Client for version 1 and 2. The method prepareDownloadFilecreates
creates a temporary file with the permissions bits of -rw-r--r--
on unix-like systems. On unix-like systems, the system temporary directory is shared between users. As such, the contents of the file downloaded via the downloadFileFromResponse
method will be visible to all other users on the local system.
Analysis of the finding determined that the affected code was unused, meaning that the exploitation likelihood is low. The unused code has been removed, effectively mitigating this issue.
This vulnerability was found due to this query that Jonathan Leitschuh contributed to the Semmle QL project.
Patches
This issue has been patched in version 1.0.0-beta.9.
See also Remove unused downloadFile helpers.
Workarounds
The recommended workaround is to specify java.io.tmpdir
when starting the JVM with the flag -Djava.io.tmpdir
, specifying a path to a directory with drw-------
permissions owned by dd-agent
.
References
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory:
Impact
Local information disclosure of sensitive information downloaded via the API using the API Client.
Finding
The Datadog API is executed on a unix-like system with multiple users. The API is used to download a file containing sensitive information. This sensitive information is exposed locally to other users. This vulnerability exists in the API Client for version 1 and 2. The method
prepareDownloadFilecreates
creates a temporary file with the permissions bits of-rw-r--r--
on unix-like systems. On unix-like systems, the system temporary directory is shared between users. As such, the contents of the file downloaded via thedownloadFileFromResponse
method will be visible to all other users on the local system.Analysis of the finding determined that the affected code was unused, meaning that the exploitation likelihood is low. The unused code has been removed, effectively mitigating this issue.
This vulnerability was found due to this query that Jonathan Leitschuh contributed to the Semmle QL project.
Patches
This issue has been patched in version 1.0.0-beta.9.
See also Remove unused downloadFile helpers.
Workarounds
The recommended workaround is to specify
java.io.tmpdir
when starting the JVM with the flag-Djava.io.tmpdir
, specifying a path to a directory withdrw-------
permissions owned bydd-agent
.References
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory: