GHSA-jfc7-64v2-mr8cMediumCVSS 5.4

@sigstore/core has DSSE payloadType type-binding failure

Published
June 26, 2026
Last Modified
June 26, 2026

🔗 CVE IDs covered (1)

📋 Description

Impact

The preAuthEncoding function in @sigstore/core uses Node.js 'ascii' encoding when converting the PAE (Pre-Authentication Encoding) string to bytes. This allows payloadType to be mutated after signing without invalidating the signature, breaking the type-binding guarantee that DSSE is designed to provide.

In packages/core/src/dsse.ts, the PAE function builds a string containing payloadType and then encodes it with Buffer.from(prefix, 'ascii').

In Node.js, 'ascii' encoding for string-to-Buffer is equivalent to 'latin1', which truncates characters above U+00FF to their low byte. This means for any ASCII character, there exist Unicode characters (at U+01xx, U+02xx, etc.) that produce the identical encoded byte:

| Original | Codepoint | Mutant | Codepoint | Encoded byte | |----------|-----------|--------|-----------|--------------| | t | U+0074 | Ŵ | U+0174 | 0x74 | | e | U+0065 | ť | U+0165 | 0x65 |

An attacker can substitute every character in payloadType with a Unicode variant whose low byte matches, producing identical PAE bytes and a passing signature verification.

Additionally, payloadType.length returns the JavaScript string length (UTF-16 code units) rather than the UTF-8 byte length required by the DSSE spec, though this is only a contributing factor for non-ASCII types.

Reproduction

const { preAuthEncoding } = require('@sigstore/core/dist/dsse.js');
const payload = Buffer.from('hello world');

const original = preAuthEncoding('text/plain', payload);
// U+01xx chars whose low bytes match the original ASCII chars
const mutant = preAuthEncoding('\u0174\u0165\u0178\u0174/\u0170\u016c\u0161\u0169\u016e', payload);

console.log('PAE bytes equal:', original.equals(mutant)); // true — should be false

🎯 Affected products1

  • npm/@sigstore/core:<= 3.2.0

🔗 References (2)