Net::IMAP: Command Injection via non-synchronizing literal in "raw" argument
Published: June 09, 2026
SECURITY IDENTIFIERS
- CVE: CVE-2026-47240 (NVD)
- GHSA: GHSA-8p34-64r3-mwg8
GEM
SEVERITY
CVSS v3.x: 5.8 (Medium)
PATCHED VERSIONS
~> 0.5.15
>= 0.6.4.1
DESCRIPTION
Several Net::IMAP commands accept a "raw data" argument that is sent verbatim after validation to prevent command injection. However, if a server does not support non-synchronizing literals, it may still be possible to inject arbitrary IMAP commands inside non-synchronizing literals.
Details
Raw data arguments support embedded literal values, both synchronizing
and non-synchronizing. Non-synchronizing literals can only be safely
sent when the server advertises any of the LITERAL+, LITERAL-, or
IMAP4rev2 capabilities. But raw data arguments do not verify server
support for non-synchronizing literals prior to sending.
Servers without support for non-synchronizing literals could handle
them in several different ways: If a server sees a "}\r\n" byte
sequence but can't parse the literal bytesize, it may cautiously
decide to close the connection, blocking any command injection attacks.
However, a server without support for non-synchronizing literals may
instead interpret the "+}\r\n" as the end of a malformed command
line and respond with a tagged BAD. In that case, the contents
of the literal will be interpreted as one or more new pipelined
commands, allowing a CRLF command injection attack to succeed.
This affects the following commands' string arguments:
criteriafor#searchand#uid_searchsearch_keysfor#sort,#thread,#uid_sort, and#uid_threadattrfor#fetchand#uid_fetch
Prior to net-imap v0.6.4, v0.5.14, and v0.4.24, raw data arguments
were not validated in any way, so they were also vulnerable to
this attack. See CVE-2026-42257 (GHSA-hm49-wcqc-g2xg).
Impact
Fortunately, LITERAL- is supported by most modern IMAP servers. Even
without support for non-synchronizing literals, cautious servers may
handle invalid literal bytesize by closing the connection . However,
servers which handle a non-synchronizing literal just like any other
malformed command will enable this vulnerability.
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.
Mitigation
Update to a version of net-imap which validates server support
for non-synchronizing literals before sending them.
If upgrading net-imap is not possible:
- Explicitly validate user-controlled inputs to prevent embedded non-synchronizing literals unless the server supports them.
- For a simpler, more cautious approach: all embedded literals can be unconditionally prohibited, by checking that string inputs do not contain any CR or LF bytes.
- Verify that the server advertises any of the
LITERAL+,LITERAL-, orIMAP4rev2capabilities before using untrusted string inputs for the affected "raw data" arguments.
