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Description

Uptime Kuma is an open source, self-hosted monitoring tool. In versions 1.23.0 through 2.2.0, the fix from GHSA-vffh-c9pq-4crh doesn't fully work to preventServer-side Template Injection (SSTI). The three mitigations added to the Liquid engine (root, relativeReference, dynamicPartials) only block quoted paths. If a project uses an unquoted absolute path, attackers can still read any file on the server. The original fix in notification-provider.js only constrains the first two steps of LiquidJS's file resolution (via root, relativeReference, and dynamicPartials options), but the third step, the require.resolve() fallback in liquid.node.js has no containment check, allowing unquoted absolute paths like /etc/passwd to resolve successfully. Quoted paths happen to be blocked only because the literal quote characters cause require.resolve('"/etc/passwd"') to throw a MODULE_NOT_FOUND error, not because of any intentional security measure. This issue has been fixed in version 2.2.1.

PUBLISHED Reserved 2026-03-17 | Published 2026-03-20 | Updated 2026-03-20 | Assigner GitHub_M




MEDIUM: 6.5CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:N/A:N

Problem types

CWE-98: Improper Control of Filename for Include/Require Statement in PHP Program ('PHP Remote File Inclusion')

CWE-1336: Improper Neutralization of Special Elements Used in a Template Engine

Product status

>= 1.23.0, < 2.2.1
affected

References

github.com/...e-kuma/security/advisories/GHSA-v832-4r73-wx5j

github.com/advisories/GHSA-vffh-c9pq-4crh

github.com/louislam/uptime-kuma/releases/tag/2.2.1

cve.org (CVE-2026-33130)

nvd.nist.gov (CVE-2026-33130)

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