net-imap vulnerable to command Injection via "raw" arguments to multiple commands
Published: May 04, 2026
SECURITY IDENTIFIERS
- CVE: CVE-2026-42257 (NVD)
- GHSA: GHSA-hm49-wcqc-g2xg
- Vendor Advisory: https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/security/advisories/GHSA-hm49-wcqc-g2xg
GEM
PATCHED VERSIONS
~> 0.4.24
~> 0.5.14
>= 0.6.4
DESCRIPTION
Summary
Several Net::IMAP commands accept a raw string argument that is sent to the
server without validation or escaping. If this string is derived from
user-controlled input, it may contain contain CRLF sequences, which an
attacker can use to inject arbitrary IMAP commands.
Details
Net::IMAP's generic argument handling, used by most command arguments,
interprets string arguments as an IMAP astring. Depending on the string
contents and the connection's UTF-8 support, this encodes strings as either a
atom, quoted, or literal. These are safe from command or argument
injection.
But the following commands transform specific String arguments to
Net::IMAP::RawData, which bypasses normal argument validation and encoding
and prints the string directly to the socket:
#uid_search,#search- when
criteriais a String, it is sent raw
- when
#uid_fetch,#fetch- when
attris a String, it is sent raw - when
attris an Array, each String inattris sent raw
- when
#uid_store,#store- when
attris a String, it is sent raw
- when
#setquota:limitis interpolated with#to_sand that string is sent raw
Because these string arguments are sent without any neutralization, they serve as a direct vector for command splitting. Any user controlled data interpolated into these strings can be used to break out of the intended command context.
Using "raw data" arguments for #uid_store, #store, and #setquota I both
inappropriate and unnecessary. Net::IMAP's generic argument handling is
sufficient to safely validate and encode their arguments. Users of the
library probably do not expect arguments to these commands to be sent raw and
might not be wary of passing unvalidated input.
The API for search criteria and fetch attributes is intentionally low-level and "close to the wire". It allows developers to use some IMAP extensions without requiring explicit support from the library and allows developers to use complex IMAP grammar without complex argument translation. Even so, basic validation is appropriate and could neutralize command injection.
Although this was explicitly documented for search criteria, it was
insufficiently documented for fetch attr. So developers may not have
realized that the attr argument to #fetch and #uid_fetch is sent as "raw
data".
Impact
If a developer passes an unvalidated user-controlled input for one of these method arguments, an attacker can append CRLF sequence followed by a new IMAP command (like DELETE mailbox). Although this does not directly enable data exfiltration, it could be combined with other attack vectors or knowledge of the target system's attributes, e.g.: shared mail folders or the application's installed response handlers.
The SEARCH, STORE, and FETCH commands, and their UID variants are some of the most commonly used features of the library. Applications that build search queries or fetch attributes dynamically based on user input (e.g., mail clients or archival tools) may be at significant risk.
Expected use of Net::IMAP#setquota is much more limited: SETQUOTA is often
only usable by users with special administrative privileges. Depending on the
server, quota administration might be managed through server configuration
rather than via the IMAP protocol SETQUOTA command. It is expected to be
uncommonly used in system administration scripts or in interactive sessions,
it should be completely controlled by trusted users, and should only use
trusted inputs. Calling #setquota with untrusted user input is expected to
be a very uncommon use case. Please note however this might be combined with
other attacks, for example CSRF, which provide unauthorized access to trusted
inputs, and may specifically target users or scripts with administrator
privileges.
Mitigation
- Update to a patched version of
net-imapwhich:- validates that
Net::IMAP::RawDatais composed of well-formed IMAPtext,literal, andliteral8values, with no unescapedNULL,CR, orLFbytes. - does not use
Net::IMAP::RawDatafor#store,#uid_store, or#setquota.
- validates that
- Prefer to send search criteria as an array of key value pairs. Avoid sending it as an interpolated string.
- If an immediate upgrade is not possible:
- String inputs to search criteria and fetch attributes can be validated
against command injection by checking for
\rand\ncharacters. - Hard-coding the store
attrargument is often appropriate. Alternatively, user controlled inputs can be restricted to a small enumerated list which is valid for the calling application. - Use
Kernel#Integerto coerce and validate user controlled inputs to#setquotalimit.
- String inputs to search criteria and fetch attributes can be validated
against command injection by checking for
RELATED
- https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/security/advisories/GHSA-hm49-wcqc-g2xg
- https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/commit/0ec4fd351263e8b9a4f683713427827b7b1ad974
- https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/commit/47c72186d272441878ca73c9499f66013829ca2f
- https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/commit/6bf02aef7e0b5931010c36e377f79a71636b306b
- https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/commit/a4f7649c3da77dec7631f03a037a478eb4330048
- https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/commit/aec06996eb87a7e1bbcef1f9f8926e8add2b8c71
- https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/releases/tag/v0.4.24
- https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/releases/tag/v0.5.14
- https://github.com/ruby/net-imap/releases/tag/v0.6.4
- https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-hm49-wcqc-g2xg
