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CVE-2026-49833 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.
A path traversal vulnerability is possible via the COAR Notify / LDN service in DSpace. This vulnerability impacts DSpace versions 8.0 <= 8.3, 9.0 <= 9.2. The attacker MUST already have DSpace administrator credentials in order to perform the attack.
When reading a file input stream of an "inbound pattern" / "template", used to generate an LDN message, the LDN class does not check for path traversal or restrict the templates to a known base path. This could allow an untrusted file from elsewhere in the file system (e.g. an export log, a bitstream path, a temporary file) to be read and interpreted as an Apache Velocity template.
Expected behaviour : Only the trusted templates kept in $dspace.dir/config/ldn should be allowed or used by LDN.
On its own this seems a fairly low-impact problem: only DSpace Administrators can set LDN template names in services, and you typically need more access to manipulate files on the server.
However, this vulnerability was included as part of an attack chain that demonstrated the ability of a DSpace Administrator to put the malicious Velocity payload in a predictable place (e.g. temporary log file from a running process) and then have that file referenced as the template name in a new service.
This means it is possible (non-trivial, but proven) for an attacker with DSpace administrator credentials to either disclose information via a specially crafted Velocity template, or exploit another weakness in the DSpace Velocity implementation by executing arbitrary java code.
The fix is included in DSpace 8.4, 9.3 and 10.0. Please upgrade to one of these versions or disable LDN (see below)
If users cannot upgrade immediately, it is possible to manually patch their DSpace backend. (No changes are necessary to the frontend.) A pull request exists which can be used to patch systems running DSpace 8.x or 9.x.
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If at all possible, DSpace recommends disabling LDN (see below) or upgrading the user's DSpace site based on the upgrade instructions. However, if users are unable to do so, they can manually apply the above patches to their DSpace backend as follows:
[dspace-src] folder, apply the patch, e.g. git apply [name-of-file].patchmvn -U clean package (This will recompile all DSpace backend code)ant update (This will copy all newly built code to their installation directory). Depending on their setup they also may need to copy the updated "server" webapp over to their Tomcat webapps folder.dspace.cfg or local.cfg, disable LDN (set ldn.enabled=false) if it is not crucial to the operation of the repository. (NOTE: LDN is disabled by default, so many DSpace sites may not use this feature)Discovered & reported by Pablo Picurelli Ortiz (@superpegaso2703), cybersecurity student at Universidad Rey Juan Carlos. Code fix developed by Kim Shepherd (@kshepherd) of The Library Code