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[return to "RCE Vulnerability in React and Next.js"]
1. coffee+ny[view] [source] 2025-12-03 18:34:31
>>rayhaa+(OP)
This vulnerability is basically the worst-case version of what people have been warning about since RSC/server actions were introduced.

The server was deserializing untrusted input from the client directly into module+export name lookups, and then invoking whatever the client asked for (without verifying that metadata.name was an own property).

    return moduleExports[metadata.name]

We can patch hasOwnProperty and tighten the deserializer, but there is deeper issue. React never really acknowledged that it was building an RPC layer. If you look at actual RPC frameworks like gPRC or even old school SOAP, they all start with schemas, explicit service definitions and a bunch of tooling to prevent boundary confusion. React went the opposite way: the API surface is whatever your bundler can see, and the endpoint is whatever the client asks for.

My guess is this won't be the last time we see security fallout from that design choice. Not because React is sloppy, but because it’s trying to solve a problem category that traditionally requires explicitness, not magic.

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2. tshadd+Gt1[view] [source] 2025-12-03 23:25:24
>>coffee+ny
To me it just looks like unacceptable carelessness, not an indictment of the alleged "lack of explicitness" versus something like gRPC. Explicit schemas aren't going to help you if you're so careless that, right at the last moment, you allow untrusted user input to reference anything whatsoever in the server's name space.
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3. delifu+RN1[view] [source] 2025-12-04 02:11:05
>>tshadd+Gt1
All mistakes can be blamed to "carelessness". This doesn't change the fact that some designs are more error-prone and more unsafe.
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