PT-2026-53017 · Go · Github.Com/Tursodatabase/Turso-Cli

Published

2026-06-26

·

Updated

2026-06-26

·

CVE-2026-48790

CVSS v3.1

5.5

Medium

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

Summary

turso-cli persists the user's Turso platform JWT to settings.json using Viper's default configPermissions of 0o644, leaving the credential file world-readable on standard Linux and macOS systems. Any other local UID on the host can read the file and recover the platform JWT, which grants full Turso platform access scoped to the user's organizations.

Impact

The token in settings.json grants the holder full Turso platform access — create or destroy databases, rotate credentials, exfiltrate data, change billing settings — for any organization the user belongs to.
Because the file is world-readable, the credential is reachable by:
  • Cron jobs or daemons running as a different system user on the same host
  • Sandboxed CI runners with a mounted home directory
  • Containers with a bind-mounted host home
  • Co-tenants on a shared multi-user developer or jumpbox host
The file path resolves through configdir.LocalConfig("turso"):
  • macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/turso/settings.json
  • Linux: ~/.config/turso/settings.json (or $XDG CONFIG HOME/turso/settings.json)
It contains the platform JWT in plaintext JSON alongside organization and username fields.
Comparable CLIs (gh, aws, docker, gcloud, plus close peers planetscale, neon, upstash) write credential files at 0o600 explicitly, so this is a deviation from the cross-vendor baseline rather than a deliberate trade-off.

Details

The OAuth callback handler stores the platform JWT via the settings layer:
go
// internal/cmd/auth.go:205-214
jwt, err := callbackServer.Result()
...
settings.SetToken(jwt)
SetToken writes through Viper:
go
// internal/settings/settings.go:124-127
func (s *Settings) SetToken(token string) {
  viper.Set("token", token)
  s.changed = true
}
Persistence runs through viper.WriteConfig:
go
// internal/settings/settings.go:96-101
func TryToPersistChanges() error {
  if err := viper.WriteConfig(); err != nil {
    return fmt.Errorf("failed to persist turso settings file: %w", err)
  }
  return nil
}
Viper v1.21.0 (pinned in turso-cli go.mod) initializes configPermissions to os.FileMode(0o644) at viper.go:198 and passes that mode straight to os.OpenFile at viper.go:1688. Without a call to viper.SetConfigPermissions(0o600), the resulting settings.json is created at 0o644.
A grep over the auth-config write path under internal/ returns zero hits for Chmod, 0o600, or 0600, confirming there is no follow-up tightening of the file mode anywhere on the persistence path.

Proof of concept

Minimal reproducer using the same Viper version turso-cli pins (github.com/spf13/viper v1.21.0):
go
package main

import (
  "fmt"
  "os"
  "path/filepath"

  "github.com/spf13/viper"
)

func main() {
  dir,  := os.MkdirTemp("", "viperpoc-*")
  defer os.RemoveAll(dir)

  viper.SetConfigName("settings")
  viper.SetConfigType("json")
  viper.AddConfigPath(dir)

  viper.Set("token", "FAKE TURSO JWT xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx")
  viper.Set("organization", "exampleorg")
  viper.SafeWriteConfig()

  st,  := os.Stat(filepath.Join(dir, "settings.json"))
  fmt.Printf("mode: %o
", st.Mode()&0o777)
}
$ go run main.go mode: 644
The same SafeWriteConfig / WriteConfig calls turso-cli uses produce the same 0o644 mode in a real turso auth login flow.

Remediation

One-line fix at the existing Viper configuration site in internal/settings/settings.go (around lines 48-50):
go
viper.SetConfigName("settings")
viper.SetConfigType("json")
viper.AddConfigPath(configPath)
viper.SetConfigPermissions(0o600) // restrict settings.json to owner only
Defense in depth:
  • Add os.Chmod(configFile, 0o600) after TryToPersistChanges, or on read (as PlanetScale does in internal/config/config.go — they Stat the token file and self-heal if Mode() &^ 0o600 is nonzero). viper.SetConfigPermissions applies only on file creation, so an existing wider-mode file is not tightened otherwise.
  • Add os.Chmod(configPath, 0o700) after configdir.MakePath(configPath) (line 43) to close the equivalent gap on the enclosing directory, which is otherwise created under the default umask.

Workarounds

Until upgraded, users can tighten the existing files manually:
sh
# Linux
chmod 600 ~/.config/turso/settings.json
chmod 700 ~/.config/turso

# macOS
chmod 600 "$HOME/Library/Application Support/turso/settings.json"
chmod 700 "$HOME/Library/Application Support/turso"
This must be repeated after any operation that recreates the file (e.g. turso auth login) until the patched version is installed.

Resources

Fix

Incorrect Default Permissions

Incorrect Permission

Found an issue in the description? Have something to add? Feel free to write us 👾

Weakness Enumeration

Related Identifiers

CVE-2026-48790
GHSA-57F6-PVX8-HWJ6

Affected Products

Github.Com/Tursodatabase/Turso-Cli