Acceptance of Extraneous Untrusted Data With Trusted Data Affecting cal.diy-6.2 package, versions *


Severity

Recommended
0.0
medium
0
10

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Threat Intelligence

EPSS
0.01% (1st percentile)

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  • Snyk IDSNYK-MINIMOSLATEST-CALDIY62-17295100
  • published11 Jun 2026
  • disclosed13 May 2026

Introduced: 13 May 2026

CVE-2026-44572  (opens in a new tab)
CWE-349  (opens in a new tab)

How to fix?

There is no fixed version for Minimos:latest cal.diy-6.2.

NVD Description

Note: Versions mentioned in the description apply only to the upstream cal.diy-6.2 package and not the cal.diy-6.2 package as distributed by Minimos. See How to fix? for Minimos:latest relevant fixed versions and status.

Next.js is a React framework for building full-stack web applications. From 12.2.0 to before 15.5.16 and 16.2.5, an external client could send a x-nextjs-data header on a normal request to a path handled by middleware that returns a redirect. When that happened, the middleware/proxy could treat the request as a data request and replace the standard Location redirect header with the internal x-nextjs-redirect header. Browsers do not follow x-nextjs-redirect, so the response became an unusable redirect for normal clients. If the application was deployed behind a CDN or reverse proxy that caches 3xx responses without varying on this header, a single attacker request could poison the cached redirect response for the affected path. Subsequent visitors could then receive a cached redirect response without a Location header, causing a denial of service for that redirect path until the cache entry expired or was purged. This vulnerability is fixed in 15.5.16 and 16.2.5.

CVSS Base Scores

version 3.1