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Description

Gradle is a build automation tool, and its native-platform tool provides Java bindings for native APIs. When resolving dependencies in versions before 9.3.0, some exceptions were not treated as fatal errors and would not cause a repository to be disabled. If a build encountered one of these exceptions, Gradle would continue to the next repository in the list and potentially resolve dependencies from a different repository. An exception like NoHttpResponseException can indicate transient errors. If the errors persist after a maximum number of retries, Gradle would continue to the next repository. This behavior could allow an attacker to disrupt the service of a repository and leverage another repository to serve malicious artifacts. This attack requires the attacker to have control over a repository after the disrupted repository. Gradle has introduced a change in behavior in Gradle 9.3.0 to stop searching other repositories when encountering these errors.

PUBLISHED Reserved 2026-01-12 | Published 2026-01-16 | Updated 2026-01-20 | Assigner GitHub_M




HIGH: 8.6CVSS:4.0/AV:N/AC:H/AT:P/PR:N/UI:P/VC:H/VI:H/VA:N/SC:N/SI:H/SA:N

Problem types

CWE-494: Download of Code Without Integrity Check

CWE-829: Inclusion of Functionality from Untrusted Control Sphere

Product status

< 9.3.0
affected

References

github.com/...gradle/security/advisories/GHSA-mqwm-5m85-gmcv

cve.org (CVE-2026-22865)

nvd.nist.gov (CVE-2026-22865)

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