Technologyglobalverified · 90%

Angular Service Worker Policy-Bypass & Credential-Stripping Vulnerabilities

When
Where
Global (internet)
Category
cyber_advisory · npm

An issue in the `@angular/service-worker` package compromises the integrity of request-policy enforcement during request reconstruction. When the Angular Service Worker intercepts network requests for matched assets, it reconstructs a new `Request` object using an internal helper function. During this reconstruction process, the helper function strips the strict, client-defined request redirect policy configuration (such as `redirect: 'error'`), falling back to the browser's default `'follow'` strategy. If the target web application makes client-side requests with a strict policy (e.g., expecting a network error instead of automatically following redirects), the service worker will bypass this instruction and automatically follow HTTP 3xx redirects to other destinations. This acts as an unintended proxy/intermediary ("Confused Deputy") and can result in cookie/credential exposure or same-origin session-restricted data leakage if public dynamic routes redirect to sensitive routes. ### Impact Web applications registering the `@angular/service-worker` package are vulnerable to this redirect-policy bypass if they make safe client-side fetch calls (such as `{ redirect: 'error' }`) to paths matched by a service worker asset group (such as lazy-loaded JavaScript bundles or dynamic public assets) that can return HTTP redirects to authenticated same-origin secure endpoints. By stripping developer-defined safety boundaries, the service worker allows the browser to transparently query and return data from credentials-guarded resources that should have been blocked at the network barrier. ### Attack Preconditions To successfully exploit this vulnerability, all of the following application states and parameters must concurrently exist: 1. **Active Angular Service Worker:** The target application uses `@angular/service-worker` and has an active registration of `ngsw-worker.js` inside the client's browser context. 2. **Asset Group Matching:** An `assetGroups` pattern in `ngsw-config.json` encompasses the target dynamic routing endpoint. 3. **Same-Origin Dynamic Redirection:** The server routes a public matched asset route to a service that returns an HTTP 3xx redirect pointing to a sensitive, session-restricted same-origin private route (e.g., `/private/account-summary.json`). 4. **Established User Session:** The victim user currently has an active authentication state, such as valid same-origin session cookies or auth headers stored by the browser. 5. **Client-Side Safe Fetch Call:** The application initiates an explicit fetch request to the route with safety parameters: `{ redirect: 'error' }`. ### Mitigations & Workarounds If upgrading the `@angular/service-worker` package is not immediately feasible, developers should implement the following defensive measures: * **Avoid Public-to-Private Dynamic Redirection:** Refactor the server architecture so that public paths matched by service worker asset groups never issue HTTP 3xx redirects to authenticated same-origin secure endpoints. * **Strict Cookie Configuration:** Apply strict flags to session cookies (`SameSite=Strict; Secure; HttpOnly`) and consider explicit route isolations (such as subdomains) for credential-guarded private resources. * **Exclude Secure Endpoints from SW Config:** Verify your `ngsw-config.json` settings and ensure that patterns targeting dynamic, secure endpoints are explicitly excluded from automatic asset groups or caching scopes. ### Patches - 22.0.0-rc.2 - 21.2.15 - 20.3.22 - 19.2.23

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