Skip to content

Update dependency koa to v2.16.4 [SECURITY]#191

Merged
renovate[bot] merged 1 commit intomainfrom
renovate/npm-koa-vulnerability
Feb 28, 2026
Merged

Update dependency koa to v2.16.4 [SECURITY]#191
renovate[bot] merged 1 commit intomainfrom
renovate/npm-koa-vulnerability

Conversation

@renovate
Copy link
Copy Markdown
Contributor

@renovate renovate Bot commented Feb 27, 2026

This PR contains the following updates:

Package Change Age Confidence
koa (source) 2.16.32.16.4 age confidence

Koa has Host Header Injection via ctx.hostname

CVE-2026-27959 / GHSA-7gcc-r8m5-44qm

More information

Details

Summary

Koa's ctx.hostname API performs naive parsing of the HTTP Host header, extracting everything before the first colon without validating the input conforms to RFC 3986 hostname syntax. When a malformed Host header containing a @ symbol (e.g., evil.com:fake@legitimate.com) is received, ctx.hostname returns evil.com - an attacker-controlled value. Applications using ctx.hostname for URL generation, password reset links, email verification URLs, or routing decisions are vulnerable to Host header injection attacks.

Details

The vulnerability exists in Koa's hostname getter in lib/request.js:

// Koa 2.16.1 - lib/request.js
get hostname() {
  const host = this.host;
  if (!host) return '';
  if ('[' === host[0]) return this.URL.hostname || ''; // IPv6 literal
  return host.split(':', 1)[0];
}

The host getter retrieves the raw header value with HTTP/2 and proxy support:

// Koa 2.16.1 - lib/request.js
get host() {
  const proxy = this.app.proxy;
  let host = proxy && this.get('X-Forwarded-Host');
  if (!host) {
    if (this.req.httpVersionMajor >= 2) host = this.get(':authority');
    if (!host) host = this.get('Host');
  }
  if (!host) return '';
  return host.split(',')[0].trim();
}
The Problem

The parsing logic simply splits on the first : and returns the first segment. There is no validation that the resulting string is a valid hostname per RFC 3986 Section 3.2.2.

RFC 3986 Section 3.2.2 defines the host component as:

host = IP-literal / IPv4address / reg-name
reg-name = *( unreserved / pct-encoded / sub-delims )
unreserved = ALPHA / DIGIT / "-" / "." / "_" / "~"
sub-delims = "!" / "$" / "&" / "'" / "(" / ")" / "*" / "+" / "," / ";" / "="

The @ character is explicitly NOT permitted in the host component - it is the delimiter separating userinfo from host in the authority component.

Attack Vector

When an attacker sends:

Host: evil.com:fake@legitimate.com:3000

Koa parses this as:

API Returns Notes
ctx.get('Host') "evil.com:fake@legitimate.com:3000" Raw header
ctx.hostname "evil.com" Attacker-controlled
ctx.host "evil.com:fake@legitimate.com:3000" Raw header value
ctx.origin "http://evil.com:fake@legitimate.com:3000" Protocol + malformed host

The ctx.hostname API returns evil.com because the parser splits on the first : without understanding that evil.com:fake@legitimate.com is a malformed authority component where evil.com:fake would be interpreted as userinfo by a proper URI parser.

Additional Concern: ctx.origin

Koa's ctx.origin property concatenates protocol and host without validation:

// lib/request.js
get origin() {
  return `${this.protocol}://${this.host}`;
}

Applications using ctx.origin for URL generation receive the full malformed Host header value, creating URLs with embedded credentials that browsers may interpret as userinfo.

HTTP/2 Consideration

Koa explicitly checks httpVersionMajor >= 2 to read the :authority pseudo-header:

if (this.req.httpVersionMajor >= 2) host = this.get(':authority');

The same vulnerability applies - malformed :authority values containing userinfo would be accepted and parsed identically.

PoC
Setup
// server.js
const Koa = require('koa'); 
const app = new Koa();

// Simulates password reset URL generation (common vulnerable pattern)
app.use(async ctx => {
  if (ctx.path === '/forgot-password') {
    const resetToken = 'abc123securtoken';
    const resetUrl = `${ctx.protocol}://${ctx.hostname}/reset?token=${resetToken}`;
    
    ctx.body = {
      message: 'Password reset link generated',
      resetUrl: resetUrl,
      debug: {
        rawHost: ctx.get('Host'),
        parsedHostname: ctx.hostname,
        origin: ctx.origin,
        protocol: ctx.protocol
      }
    };
  }
});

app.listen(3000, () => console.log('Server on http://localhost:3000'));
Exploit
curl -H "Host: evil.com:fake@localhost:3000" http://localhost:3000/forgot-password
Result
{
  "message": "Password reset link generated",
  "resetUrl": "http://evil.com/reset?token=abc123securtoken",
  "debug": {
    "rawHost": "evil.com:fake@localhost:3000",
    "parsedHostname": "evil.com",
    "origin": "http://evil.com:fake@localhost:3000",
    "protocol": "http"
  }
}

The password reset URL points to evil.com instead of the legitimate server. In a real attack:

  1. Attacker requests password reset for victim's email with malicious Host header
  2. Server generates reset link using ctx.hostnamehttps://evil.com/reset?token=SECRET
  3. Victim receives email with poisoned link
  4. Victim clicks link, token is sent to attacker's server
  5. Attacker uses token to reset victim's password
Additional Test Cases
##### Basic injection
curl -H "Host: evil.com:x@legitimate.com" http://localhost:3000/forgot-password

##### Result: hostname = "evil.com"

##### With port preservation attempt
curl -H "Host: evil.com:443@​legitimate.com:3000" http://localhost:3000/forgot-password  

##### Result: hostname = "evil.com"

##### Unicode/encoded variations
curl -H "Host: evil.com:x%40legitimate.com" http://localhost:3000/forgot-password

##### Result: hostname = "evil.com"
Deployment Consideration

For this attack to succeed in production, the malicious Host header must reach the Koa application. This occurs when:

  1. No reverse proxy - Application directly exposed to internet
  2. Misconfigured proxy - Proxy doesn't override/validate Host header
  3. Proxy trust enabled (app.proxy = true) - X-Forwarded-Host can be injected
  4. Default virtual host - Server is the catch-all for unrecognized Host headers
Impact
Vulnerability Type
  • CWE-20: Improper Input Validation
  • CWE-644: Improper Neutralization of HTTP Headers for Scripting Syntax
Attack Scenarios

1. Password Reset Poisoning (High Severity)

  • Attacker hijacks password reset tokens by poisoning reset URLs
  • Requires victim to click link in email
  • Results in account takeover

2. Email Verification Bypass

  • Attacker poisons email verification links
  • Can verify attacker-controlled email on victim accounts

3. OAuth/SSO Callback Manipulation

  • Applications using ctx.hostname for OAuth redirect URIs
  • Attacker redirects OAuth callbacks to malicious server
  • Results in token theft

4. Web Cache Poisoning

  • If responses are cached without Host in cache key
  • Poisoned URLs served to all users
  • Persistent XSS/phishing via cached responses

5. Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF)

  • Internal routing decisions based on ctx.hostname
  • Attacker manipulates which backend receives requests
Who Is Impacted
  • Direct impact: Any Koa application using ctx.hostname or ctx.origin for URL generation without additional validation
  • Common patterns: Password reset, email verification, webhook URL generation, multi-tenant routing, OAuth implementations

Severity

  • CVSS Score: Unknown
  • Vector String: CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:N/I:H/A:N

References

This data is provided by OSV and the GitHub Advisory Database (CC-BY 4.0).


Release Notes

koajs/koa (koa)

v2.16.4

Compare Source

What's Changed


Configuration

📅 Schedule: Branch creation - "" (UTC), Automerge - Between 12:00 AM and 03:59 AM ( * 0-3 * * * ) (UTC).

🚦 Automerge: Enabled.

Rebasing: Whenever PR is behind base branch, or you tick the rebase/retry checkbox.

🔕 Ignore: Close this PR and you won't be reminded about this update again.


  • If you want to rebase/retry this PR, check this box

This PR was generated by Mend Renovate. View the repository job log.

@codecov-commenter
Copy link
Copy Markdown

codecov-commenter commented Feb 27, 2026

⚠️ Please install the 'codecov app svg image' to ensure uploads and comments are reliably processed by Codecov.

Codecov Report

✅ All modified and coverable lines are covered by tests.
✅ Project coverage is 91.17%. Comparing base (b51c5b7) to head (487c16d).
❗ Your organization needs to install the Codecov GitHub app to enable full functionality.

Additional details and impacted files
@@           Coverage Diff           @@
##             main     #191   +/-   ##
=======================================
  Coverage   91.17%   91.17%           
=======================================
  Files           8        8           
  Lines         238      238           
  Branches       62       62           
=======================================
  Hits          217      217           
  Misses         20       20           
  Partials        1        1           

☔ View full report in Codecov by Sentry.
📢 Have feedback on the report? Share it here.

🚀 New features to boost your workflow:
  • ❄️ Test Analytics: Detect flaky tests, report on failures, and find test suite problems.
  • 📦 JS Bundle Analysis: Save yourself from yourself by tracking and limiting bundle sizes in JS merges.

@renovate renovate Bot changed the title Update dependency koa to v2.16.4 [SECURITY] Update dependency koa to v2.16.4 [SECURITY] - autoclosed Feb 27, 2026
@renovate renovate Bot closed this Feb 27, 2026
@renovate renovate Bot deleted the renovate/npm-koa-vulnerability branch February 27, 2026 10:40
@renovate renovate Bot changed the title Update dependency koa to v2.16.4 [SECURITY] - autoclosed Update dependency koa to v2.16.4 [SECURITY] Feb 27, 2026
@renovate renovate Bot reopened this Feb 27, 2026
@renovate renovate Bot force-pushed the renovate/npm-koa-vulnerability branch 2 times, most recently from 383d1bd to 487c16d Compare February 27, 2026 15:19
@renovate renovate Bot merged commit f3e622d into main Feb 28, 2026
2 checks passed
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment

Labels

None yet

Projects

None yet

Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

1 participant