Stored XSS in Rack::Directory via javascript: filenames rendered into anchor href
Published: February 17, 2026
SECURITY IDENTIFIERS
- CVE: CVE-2026-25500 (NVD)
- GHSA: GHSA-whrj-4476-wvmp
- Vendor Advisory: https://github.com/rack/rack/security/advisories/GHSA-whrj-4476-wvmp
GEM
SEVERITY
CVSS v3.x: 5.4 (Medium)
PATCHED VERSIONS
~> 2.2.22
~> 3.1.20
>= 3.2.5
DESCRIPTION
Summary
Rack::Directory generates an HTML directory index where each file entry is rendered as a clickable link. If a file exists on disk whose basename begins with the javascript: scheme (e.g. javascript:alert(1)), the generated index includes an anchor whose href attribute is exactly javascript:alert(1). Clicking this entry executes arbitrary JavaScript in the context of the hosting application.
This results in a client-side XSS condition in directory listings generated by Rack::Directory.
Details
Rack::Directory renders directory entries using an HTML row template similar to:
<a href='%s'>%s</a>
The %s placeholder is populated directly with the file’s basename. If the basename begins with javascript:, the resulting HTML contains an executable JavaScript URL:
<a href='javascript:alert(1)'>javascript:alert(1)</a>
Because the value is inserted directly into the href attribute without scheme validation or normalization, browsers interpret it as a JavaScript URI. When a user clicks the link, the JavaScript executes in the origin of the Rack application.
Impact
If Rack::Directory is used to expose filesystem contents over HTTP, an attacker who can create or upload files within that directory may introduce a malicious filename beginning with javascript:.
When a user visits the directory listing and clicks the entry, arbitrary JavaScript executes in the application's origin. Exploitation requires user interaction (clicking the malicious entry).
Mitigation
- Update to a patched version of Rack in which
Rack::Directoryprefixes generated anchors with a relative path indicator (e.g../filename). - Avoid exposing user-controlled directories via
Rack::Directory. - Apply a strict Content Security Policy (CSP) to reduce impact of potential client-side execution issues.
- Where feasible, restrict or sanitize uploaded filenames to disallow dangerous URI scheme prefixes.
