Default table permissions in SurrealDB were FULL instead of NONE. This would lead to tables having FULL permissions for SELECT, CREATE, UPDATE and DELETE unless some other permissions were specified via the PERMISSIONS clause.
We have decided to treat this behaviour as a vulnerability due to its security implications, especially considering the lack of specific documentation and potential for confusion due to the INFO FOR DB statement previously not displaying default permissions. Treating it as a bug fix provides justification for a change in default behavior outside of a major release.
Impact
Any client authorized to query data in a SurrealDB instance will have full access to any tables that were defined with no explicit permissions and that are within its authorization scope (i.e. namespace or database), including creating, reading, updating and deleting data. This is specially relevant for SurrealDB instances allowing guest access with publicly exposed interfaces (e.g. HTTP REST API or WebSocket API), since a remote unauthenticated user may gain full access to any tables that were defined without any explicit permissions. Tables that were defined with explicit permissions using the PERMISSIONS clause are not affected.
Patches
- Version
1.0.1 includes a patch for this specific issue. Later releases will also include the patch.
- Version
1.1.0-beta.1 and latest nightly releases already include the patch for this issue.
In patched versions:
- Tables defined after the patch without explicit permissions have
NONE permissions.
- Table permissions are always explicitly displayed with the
INFO FOR DB statement.
Workarounds
In unpatched versions, this issue can be resolved by explicitly defining table permissions as shown in the following examples:
-- INSECURE EXAMPLE
-- DEFINE TABLE insecure;
-- SECURE EXAMPLE 1
DEFINE TABLE secure PERMISSIONS NONE;
-- SECURE EXAMPLE 2
DEFINE TABLE secure PERMISSIONS FOR SELECT, CREATE, UPDATE, DELETE NONE;
-- SECURE EXAMPLE 3
DEFINE TABLE secure PERMISSIONS FOR
SELECT WHERE user = $auth.id,
CREATE, UPDATE, DELETE NONE;
-- SECURE EXAMPLE 4
DEFINE TABLE secure PERMISSIONS
FOR select WHERE published = true OR user = $auth.id
FOR create, update WHERE user = $auth.id
FOR delete WHERE user = $auth.id OR $auth.admin = true;
References
References
Default table permissions in SurrealDB were
FULLinstead ofNONE. This would lead to tables havingFULLpermissions forSELECT,CREATE,UPDATEandDELETEunless some other permissions were specified via thePERMISSIONSclause.We have decided to treat this behaviour as a vulnerability due to its security implications, especially considering the lack of specific documentation and potential for confusion due to the
INFO FOR DBstatement previously not displaying default permissions. Treating it as a bug fix provides justification for a change in default behavior outside of a major release.Impact
Any client authorized to query data in a SurrealDB instance will have full access to any tables that were defined with no explicit permissions and that are within its authorization scope (i.e. namespace or database), including creating, reading, updating and deleting data. This is specially relevant for SurrealDB instances allowing guest access with publicly exposed interfaces (e.g. HTTP REST API or WebSocket API), since a remote unauthenticated user may gain full access to any tables that were defined without any explicit permissions. Tables that were defined with explicit permissions using the
PERMISSIONSclause are not affected.Patches
1.0.1includes a patch for this specific issue. Later releases will also include the patch.1.1.0-beta.1and latest nightly releases already include the patch for this issue.In patched versions:
NONEpermissions.INFO FOR DBstatement.Workarounds
In unpatched versions, this issue can be resolved by explicitly defining table permissions as shown in the following examples:
References
References