GHSA-q6f4-qqrg-jv6xHigh

@angular/common: Information Leak via Default Caching of Credentialed Requests in HttpTransferCache

Published
June 15, 2026
Last Modified
June 15, 2026

🔗 CVE IDs covered (1)

📋 Description

A vulnerability was discovered in @angular/common when Server-Side Rendering (SSR) and hydration are enabled. The HttpTransferCache utility optimizes hydration by caching outgoing HTTP requests performed during SSR and transferring the cached state to the client-side application via TransferState.

However, the caching mechanism fails to inspect the withCredentials flag or the Cookie header of outgoing requests. As a result, credentialed, user-specific responses may be cached by default in the shared TransferState payload. When these responses are serialized into the HTML, any caching layer (such as a CDN, reverse proxy, or shared server cache) that caches the SSR-rendered HTML page could inadvertently cache and leak one user's private data to other users, leading to a high-severity information disclosure vulnerability.

Impact

Successful exploitation allows an unauthenticated attacker to obtain sensitive, user-specific information of other authenticated users. This occurs when:

  • The SSR-rendered HTML containing the cached private data is stored in a shared cache (e.g., CDN, reverse proxy).
  • Subsequent requests for the same page receive the cached HTML containing the first user's private data.

Attack Preconditions

  • SSR and Hydration Enabled: The Angular application must be configured to use Server-Side Rendering and hydration (e.g., using provideClientHydration()).
  • Credentialed Requests during SSR: The application must perform HTTP requests that require user-specific authentication (using cookies or withCredentials: true) during the initial server-side render.
  • Shared Caching: The application's HTML responses must be cached by a shared caching layer (CDN, reverse proxy, or server-side cache) without proper cache-control headers to distinguish authenticated users.

Patches

  • 22.0.0-rc.2
  • 21.2.15
  • 20.3.22
  • 19.2.23

🎯 Affected products5

  • npm/@angular/common:>= 22.0.0-next.0, < 22.0.0-rc.2
  • npm/@angular/common:>= 20.0.0-next.0, < 20.3.22
  • npm/@angular/common:>= 19.0.0-next.0, < 19.2.23
  • npm/@angular/common:<= 18.2.14
  • npm/@angular/common:>= 21.0.0-next.0, < 21.2.15

🔗 References (3)