Directory Traversal Affecting flowise-components package, versions >=1.4.3 <3.1.0


Severity

Recommended
0.0
medium
0
10

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  • Snyk IDSNYK-JS-FLOWISECOMPONENTS-16115272
  • published21 Apr 2026
  • disclosed16 Apr 2026
  • credittenbbughunters

Introduced: 16 Apr 2026

New CVE NOT AVAILABLE CWE-22  (opens in a new tab)

How to fix?

Upgrade flowise-components to version 3.1.0 or higher.

Overview

flowise-components is a Flowiseai Components

Affected versions of this package are vulnerable to Directory Traversal via the vector store path handling in Faiss.ts and SimpleStore.ts. An attacker can read from or write to unintended filesystem locations by supplying a crafted basePath when creating or loading a vector store. This can overwrite application files or place vector store data outside the intended storage area, leading to data integrity loss and exposing local files to any deployment that accepts untrusted flow configuration or node inputs.

Details

A Directory Traversal attack (also known as path traversal) aims to access files and directories that are stored outside the intended folder. By manipulating files with "dot-dot-slash (../)" sequences and its variations, or by using absolute file paths, it may be possible to access arbitrary files and directories stored on file system, including application source code, configuration, and other critical system files.

Directory Traversal vulnerabilities can be generally divided into two types:

  • Information Disclosure: Allows the attacker to gain information about the folder structure or read the contents of sensitive files on the system.

st is a module for serving static files on web pages, and contains a vulnerability of this type. In our example, we will serve files from the public route.

If an attacker requests the following URL from our server, it will in turn leak the sensitive private key of the root user.

curl http://localhost:8080/public/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/%2e%2e/root/.ssh/id_rsa

Note %2e is the URL encoded version of . (dot).

  • Writing arbitrary files: Allows the attacker to create or replace existing files. This type of vulnerability is also known as Zip-Slip.

One way to achieve this is by using a malicious zip archive that holds path traversal filenames. When each filename in the zip archive gets concatenated to the target extraction folder, without validation, the final path ends up outside of the target folder. If an executable or a configuration file is overwritten with a file containing malicious code, the problem can turn into an arbitrary code execution issue quite easily.

The following is an example of a zip archive with one benign file and one malicious file. Extracting the malicious file will result in traversing out of the target folder, ending up in /root/.ssh/ overwriting the authorized_keys file:

2018-04-15 22:04:29 .....           19           19  good.txt
2018-04-15 22:04:42 .....           20           20  ../../../../../../root/.ssh/authorized_keys

CVSS Base Scores

version 4.0
version 3.1