Bug 2450422 (CVE-2026-26209)

Summary: CVE-2026-26209 cbor2: cbor2: Denial of Service due to uncontrolled recursion via crafted CBOR payloads
Product: [Other] Security Response Reporter: OSIDB Bzimport <bzimport>
Component: vulnerabilityAssignee: Product Security DevOps Team <prodsec-dev>
Status: NEW --- QA Contact:
Severity: medium Docs Contact:
Priority: medium    
Version: unspecifiedCC: alinfoot, bbrownin, dschmidt, dtrifiro, erezende, jkoehler, jlanda, jwong, kshier, lphiri, omaciel, rbryant, simaishi, smcdonal, stcannon, teagle, ttakamiy, weaton, yguenane
Target Milestone: ---Keywords: Security
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Hardware: All   
OS: Linux   
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A flaw was found in cbor2, a library for encoding and decoding Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) data. A remote attacker can exploit this vulnerability by sending a specially crafted CBOR payload containing deeply nested structures. This can cause the application to crash due to uncontrolled recursion, leading to a complete Denial of Service (DoS) for the affected application.
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Description OSIDB Bzimport 2026-03-23 19:02:36 UTC
cbor2 provides encoding and decoding for the Concise Binary Object Representation (CBOR) serialization format. Versions prior to 5.9.0 are vulnerable to a Denial of Service (DoS) attack caused by uncontrolled recursion when decoding deeply nested CBOR structures. This vulnerability affects both the pure Python implementation and the C extension `_cbor2`. The C extension relies on Python's internal recursion limits `Py_EnterRecursiveCall` rather than a data-driven depth limit, meaning it still raises `RecursionError` and crashes the worker process when the limit is hit. While the library handles moderate nesting levels, it lacks a hard depth limit. An attacker can supply a crafted CBOR payload containing approximately 100,000 nested arrays `0x81`. When `cbor2.loads()` attempts to parse this, it hits the Python interpreter's maximum recursion depth or exhausts the stack, causing the process to crash with a `RecursionError`. Because the library does not enforce its own limits, it allows an external attacker to exhaust the host application's stack resource. In many web application servers (e.g., Gunicorn, Uvicorn) or task queues (Celery), an unhandled `RecursionError` terminates the worker process immediately. By sending a stream of these small (<100KB) malicious packets, an attacker can repeatedly crash worker processes, resulting in a complete Denial of Service for the application. Version 5.9.0 patches the issue.