CVE-2025-57820 is a low severity vulnerability with a CVSS score of 0.0. No known exploits currently, and patches are available.
Very low probability of exploitation
EPSS predicts the probability of exploitation in the next 30 days based on real-world threat data, complementing CVSS severity scores with actual risk assessment.
devalue.parse allows __proto__ to be setA string passed to devalue.parse could represent an object with a __proto__ property, which would assign a prototype to an object while allowing properties to be overwritten:
class Vector {
constructor(x, y) {
this.x = x;
this.y = y;
}
get magnitude() {
return (this.x ** 2 + this.y ** 2) ** 0.5;
}
}
const payload = `[{"x":1,"y":2,"magnitude":3,"__proto__":4},3,4,"nope",["Vector",5],[6,7],8,9]`;
const vector = devalue.parse(payload, {
Vector: ([x, y]) => new Vector(x, y)
});
console.log("Is vector", vector instanceof Vector); // true
console.log(vector.x) // 3
console.log(vector.y) // 4
console.log(vector.magnitude); // "nope" instead of 5
devalue.parse allows array prototype methods to be assigned to objectIn a payload constructed with devalue.stringify, values are represented as array indices, where the array contains the 'hydrated' values:
devalue.stringify({ message: 'hello' }); // [{"message":1},"hello"]
devalue.parse does not check that an index is numeric, which means that it could assign an array prototype method to a property instead:
const object = devalue.parse('[{"toString":"push"}]');
object.toString(); // 0
This could be used by a creative attacker to bypass server-side validation.
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