From 9f80a0f1ff25f948e310ac8e31a09f13ed2675ef Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: osv-robot Date: Tue, 3 Mar 2026 03:29:18 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] test: update snapshots --- tools/apitester/__snapshots__/cassette_single_query.snap | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) diff --git a/tools/apitester/__snapshots__/cassette_single_query.snap b/tools/apitester/__snapshots__/cassette_single_query.snap index 563228ed81e..8fb254f3dea 100755 --- a/tools/apitester/__snapshots__/cassette_single_query.snap +++ b/tools/apitester/__snapshots__/cassette_single_query.snap @@ -3383,6 +3383,7 @@ "details": "## Summary\n\nNokogiri's CRuby extension fails to check the return value from `xmlC14NExecute` in the method `Nokogiri::XML::Document#canonicalize` and `Nokogiri::XML::Node#canonicalize`. When canonicalization fails, an empty string is returned instead of raising an exception. This incorrect return value may allow downstream libraries to accept invalid or incomplete canonicalized XML, which has been demonstrated to enable signature validation bypass in SAML libraries.\n\nJRuby is not affected, as the Java implementation correctly raises `RuntimeError` on canonicalization failure.\n\n## Mitigation\n\nUpgrade to Nokogiri `\u003e= 1.19.1`.\n\n## Severity\n\nThe maintainers have assessed this as **Medium** severity. Nokogiri itself is a parsing library without a clear security boundary related to canonicalization, so the direct impact is that a method returns incorrect data on invalid input. However, this behavior was exploited in practice to bypass SAML signature validation in downstream libraries (see References).\n\n## Credit\n\nThis vulnerability was responsibly reported by HackerOne researcher `d4d`.", "modified": "", "published": "2026-02-18T21:57:38Z", + "related": ["CGA-wm7m-2wf3-587h"], "database_specific": "", "references": [ {