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CVE Scan for node:24.15-alpine

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4 Known Vulnerabilities in this Docker Image

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Critical
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High
3
Medium
0
Low
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Info/ Unspecified/ Unknown
CVE IDSeverityPackageAffected VersionFixed VersionCVSS Score
CVE-2026-33671highpkg:npm/picomatch@4.0.3>=4.0.0,<4.0.44.0.47.5

Impact

picomatch is vulnerable to Regular Expression Denial of Service (ReDoS) when processing crafted extglob patterns. Certain patterns using extglob quantifiers such as +() and *(), especially when combined with overlapping alternatives or nested extglobs, are compiled into regular expressions that can exhibit catastrophic backtracking on non-matching input.

Examples of problematic patterns include +(a|aa), +(*|?), +(+(a)), *(+(a)), and +(+(+(a))). In local reproduction, these patterns caused multi-second event-loop blocking with relatively short inputs. For example, +(a|aa) compiled to ^(?:(?=.)(?:a|aa)+)$ and took about 2 seconds to reject a 41-character non-matching input, while nested patterns such as +(+(a)) and *(+(a)) took around 29 seconds to reject a 33-character input on a modern M1 MacBook.

Applications are impacted when they allow untrusted users to supply glob patterns that are passed to picomatch for compilation or matching. In those cases, an attacker can cause excessive CPU consumption and block the Node.js event loop, resulting in a denial of service. Applications that only use trusted, developer-controlled glob patterns are much less likely to be exposed in a security-relevant way.

Patches

This issue is fixed in picomatch 4.0.4, 3.0.2 and 2.3.2.

Users should upgrade to one of these versions or later, depending on their supported release line.

Workarounds

If upgrading is not immediately possible, avoid passing untrusted glob patterns to picomatch.

Possible mitigations include:

  • disable extglob support for untrusted patterns by using noextglob: true
  • reject or sanitize patterns containing nested extglobs or extglob quantifiers such as +() and *()
  • enforce strict allowlists for accepted pattern syntax
  • run matching in an isolated worker or separate process with time and resource limits
  • apply application-level request throttling and input validation for any endpoint that accepts glob patterns

Resources

  • Picomatch repository: https://github.com/micromatch/picomatch
  • lib/parse.js and lib/constants.js are involved in generating the vulnerable regex forms
  • Comparable ReDoS precedent: CVE-2024-4067 (micromatch)
  • Comparable generated-regex precedent: CVE-2024-45296 (path-to-regexp)
Relevance:

The relevance of this vulnerability cannot be determined because the provided description is missing any technical details regarding affected components or attack vectors. Without a specific description for CVE-2026-33671, it is impossible to contextualize its impact on the Node.js runtime or the underlying Alpine Linux environment. It would only become critical if it targeted the specific Node.js version (24.15) or core Alpine system libraries used for application execution. (Note: Relevance analysis is automatically generated and may require verification.)

Package URL(s):
  • pkg:npm/picomatch@4.0.3
CVE-2025-60876mediumbusybox<=1.37.0-r30not fixed6.5
CVE-2026-33750mediumpkg:npm/brace-expansion@5.0.4>=4.0.0,<5.0.55.0.56.5
CVE-2026-33672mediumpkg:npm/picomatch@4.0.3>=4.0.0,<4.0.44.0.45.3

Severity Levels

Exploitation could lead to severe consequences, such as system compromise or data loss. Requires immediate attention.

Vulnerability could be exploited relatively easily and lead to significant impact. Requires prompt attention.

Exploitation is possible but might require specific conditions. Impact is moderate. Should be addressed in a timely manner.

Exploitation is difficult or impact is minimal. Address when convenient or as part of regular maintenance.

Severity is not determined, informational, or negligible. Review based on context.

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