Summary
In versions of dawidd6/action-download-artifact before v6, a repository's forks were also searched by default when attempting to find matching artifacts. This could be exploited by an unprivileged attacker to introduce compromised artifacts (such as malicious executables) into a privileged workflow context, as creating a fork requires no privileges.
Users should immediately upgrade to v6 or newer, which changes the default behavior to avoid searching forks for matching artifacts. Users who cannot upgrade should explicitly set allow_forks: false to disable searching forks for artifacts.
Details
GitHub's artifact storage for workflows does not natively distinguish between artifacts created by a repository and artifacts created by forks of that repository. As a result, attempting to retrieve the "latest" artifact for a workflow run can return artifacts produced by a fork, rather than its upstream.
Because any GitHub user can create a fork of a public repository, this allows for artifact poisoning in the following scenarios (as well as potentially others):
- Repository
alice/foo runs build.yml, producing build.exe
- Repository
alice/foo runs publish.yml, which uses action-download-artifact@v5 to retrieve the latest build.exe from build.yml
To compromise publish.yml in this scenario, Mallory forks alice/foo to mallory/foo, and then modifies build.yml to produce a compromised build.exe. Mallory can then repeatedly trigger their copy of build.yml to ensure that their compromised build.exe is always the latest artifact, meaning that Alice's publish.yml will retrieve it.
Additional details on this vulnerability can be found in this blog post from 2022:
Impact
This vulnerability impacts all repositories on GitHub that use action-download-artifacts@v5 or older and do not disable allow_forks: true, which is the default.
If a repository is affected, the severity ranges from downstream contamination (such as publishing attacker-controlled artifacts) to direct workflow compromise (if the retrieved artifact is then executed in a privileged workflow context, such as push or pull_request_target).
References
Summary
In versions of
dawidd6/action-download-artifactbefore v6, a repository's forks were also searched by default when attempting to find matching artifacts. This could be exploited by an unprivileged attacker to introduce compromised artifacts (such as malicious executables) into a privileged workflow context, as creating a fork requires no privileges.Users should immediately upgrade to v6 or newer, which changes the default behavior to avoid searching forks for matching artifacts. Users who cannot upgrade should explicitly set
allow_forks: falseto disable searching forks for artifacts.Details
GitHub's artifact storage for workflows does not natively distinguish between artifacts created by a repository and artifacts created by forks of that repository. As a result, attempting to retrieve the "latest" artifact for a workflow run can return artifacts produced by a fork, rather than its upstream.
Because any GitHub user can create a fork of a public repository, this allows for artifact poisoning in the following scenarios (as well as potentially others):
alice/foorunsbuild.yml, producingbuild.exealice/foorunspublish.yml, which usesaction-download-artifact@v5to retrieve the latestbuild.exefrombuild.ymlTo compromise
publish.ymlin this scenario, Mallory forksalice/footomallory/foo, and then modifiesbuild.ymlto produce a compromisedbuild.exe. Mallory can then repeatedly trigger their copy ofbuild.ymlto ensure that their compromisedbuild.exeis always the latest artifact, meaning that Alice'spublish.ymlwill retrieve it.Additional details on this vulnerability can be found in this blog post from 2022:
Impact
This vulnerability impacts all repositories on GitHub that use
action-download-artifacts@v5or older and do not disableallow_forks: true, which is the default.If a repository is affected, the severity ranges from downstream contamination (such as publishing attacker-controlled artifacts) to direct workflow compromise (if the retrieved artifact is then executed in a privileged workflow context, such as
pushorpull_request_target).References