CVE-2026-2391 Affecting sqlpad package, versions <7.5.7-r10


Severity

Recommended
0.0
high
0
10

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Threat Intelligence

EPSS
0.04% (12th percentile)

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  • Snyk IDSNYK-CHAINGUARDLATEST-SQLPAD-15352237
  • published26 Feb 2026
  • disclosed12 Feb 2026

Introduced: 12 Feb 2026

NewCVE-2026-2391  (opens in a new tab)

How to fix?

Upgrade Chainguard sqlpad to version 7.5.7-r10 or higher.

NVD Description

Note: Versions mentioned in the description apply only to the upstream sqlpad package and not the sqlpad package as distributed by Chainguard. See How to fix? for Chainguard relevant fixed versions and status.

Summary

The arrayLimit option in qs does not enforce limits for comma-separated values when comma: true is enabled, allowing attackers to cause denial-of-service via memory exhaustion. This is a bypass of the array limit enforcement, similar to the bracket notation bypass addressed in GHSA-6rw7-vpxm-498p (CVE-2025-15284).

Details

When the `comma` option is set to `true` (not the default, but configurable in applications), qs allows parsing comma-separated strings as arrays (e.g., `?param=a,b,c` becomes `['a', 'b', 'c']`). However, the limit check for `arrayLimit` (default: 20) and the optional throwOnLimitExceeded occur after the comma-handling logic in `parseArrayValue`, enabling a bypass. This permits creation of arbitrarily large arrays from a single parameter, leading to excessive memory allocation.

Vulnerable code (lib/parse.js: lines ~40-50):

if (val &amp;&amp; typeof val === &#39;string&#39; &amp;&amp; options.comma &amp;&amp; val.indexOf(&#39;,&#39;) &gt; -1) {
    return val.split(&#39;,&#39;);
}

if (options.throwOnLimitExceeded &amp;&amp; currentArrayLength &gt;= options.arrayLimit) {     throw new RangeError(&#39;Array limit exceeded. Only &#39; + options.arrayLimit + &#39; element&#39; + (options.arrayLimit === 1 ? &#39;&#39; : &#39;s&#39;) + &#39; allowed in an array.&#39;); }

return val;

The split(&#39;,&#39;) returns the array immediately, skipping the subsequent limit check. Downstream merging via utils.combine does not prevent allocation, even if it marks overflows for sparse arrays.This discrepancy allows attackers to send a single parameter with millions of commas (e.g., ?param=,,,,,,,,...), allocating massive arrays in memory without triggering limits. It bypasses the intent of arrayLimit, which is enforced correctly for indexed (a[0]=) and bracket (a[]=) notations (the latter fixed in v6.14.1 per GHSA-6rw7-vpxm-498p).

PoC

**Test 1 - Basic bypass:** ``` npm install qs ```
const qs = require(&#39;qs&#39;);

const payload = &#39;a=&#39; + &#39;,&#39;.repeat(25);  // 26 elements after split (bypasses arrayLimit: 5)
const options = { comma: true, arrayLimit: 5, throwOnLimitExceeded: true };

try {
  const result = qs.parse(payload, options);
  console.log(result.a.length);  // Outputs: 26 (bypass successful)
} catch (e) {
  console.log(&#39;Limit enforced:&#39;, e.message);  // Not thrown
}

Configuration:

  • comma: true
  • arrayLimit: 5
  • throwOnLimitExceeded: true

Expected: Throws "Array limit exceeded" error. Actual: Parses successfully, creating an array of length 26.

Impact

Denial of Service (DoS) via memory exhaustion.

CVSS Base Scores

version 3.1